The little known Conrad 30 J-11 visa waiver programme attracts a large number of Indian doctors to the US every year.
The recently announced suspension of premium processing for H-1B visa petitions by US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) would exacerbate physician shortages, particularly in rural areas that depend on doctors who participate in the Conrad 30 J-1 visa waiver programme, the Senators said.
In a letter to USCIS, the Senators -- Amy Klobuchar, Susan Collins and Heidi Heitkamp - said the suspension of premium processing will delay when these doctors can begin to practice medicine and harm patients and communities that rely on them.
The suspension of premium processing will delay when these doctors can begin to serve patients in under-served areas across the US and harm patients and communities that rely on local healthcare facilities utilising Conrad 30 doctors to fill critical needs.
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"Currently, according to the Health Resources and Services Administration, there are more than 6,600 designated Primary Medical Health Professional Shortage Areas and over half of these are in rural areas. Conrad 30 helps address this daunting shortage of doctors and has brought more than 15,000 physicians to underserved communities over the last 15 years," the Senators wrote.
In 2015, Klobuchar, Collins and Heitkamp introduced bipartisan legislation to make the Conrad 30 programme permanent.
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