The researchers, including those from Harvard Medical School in the US, examined whether patient outcomes varied by countries where international medical graduates were trained.
They were restricted to eight countries with the largest number of international medical graduates going to the US - India, Pakistan, Philippines, Syria, Nigeria, Mexico, Egypt, and China - to avoid unstable estimates.
The researchers said that current standards of selecting international medical graduates for practice in the US "appear sufficiently rigorous to ensure high quality care."
International medical graduates make up a quarter of the physician workforce in the US, UK, Canada and Australia.
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Although international graduates are required to pass examinations to practice medicine in the UK and US, concerns have been raised about the quality of care provided by these graduates.
Researchers set out to determine whether patient outcomes differ between general internists who graduated from a medical school outside the US and those who graduated from a US medical school.
They analysed a national sample of data for over 1.2 million Medicare beneficiaries aged 65 years or older admitted to hospital with a medical condition in 2011-14 and treated by over 44,000 international or US medical graduates who were general internists.
Compared with patients treated by US graduates, patients treated by international graduates had slightly more chronic conditions.
The researchers said that for every 250 patients treated by US medical graduates, one patient's life would be saved if the quality of care were equivalent between the international graduates and US graduates.
Readmission rates did not differ between the two types of graduates, whereas costs of care per admission was slightly higher for international medical graduates.
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