| Metric | 2018 Data | |--------|-----------| | | 50.6 years | | Percentage of female family physicians | 44% (rising rapidly) | | Practice setting | 47% employed by hospital/health system; 33% independent private practice; 20% community health center | | Average patient panel size | 1,800–2,200 patients per FTE physician | | Median annual compensation | $217,000 (MGMA data) | | Mean visit length | 18–20 minutes |
Introduction
Family practice in 2018 was a field in transition—proud of its whole-person, continuous care mission but squeezed by systemic inefficiencies. It was neither the era of the solo doctor nor the fully digitized, AI-assisted future. Instead, 2018 was the year family physicians learned to practice with one eye on the patient and one on the quality measure, all while managing more chronic disease, more mental health need, and more regulatory complexity than ever before. Note: This write-up is based on data and publications from 2018, including the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) annual meeting reports, MGMA compensation surveys, and contemporary health policy analyses from the Robert Graham Center and Commonwealth Fund. family practice 2018
The year 2018 represented a critical juncture for family medicine in the United States and globally. Caught between the lingering demands of fee-for-service models and the accelerating shift toward value-based care, family practices in 2018 were defined by adaptation, technological strain, and a renewed focus on the patient-centered medical home (PCMH). While the specialty remained the backbone of primary care, it faced unprecedented pressure from administrative burdens, workforce shortages, and the mental health crisis. | Metric | 2018 Data | |--------|-----------| | | 50
At year’s end, family practice was resilient but fatigued. The specialty was moving away from episodic, acute-care-only models toward comprehensive, team-based, longitudinal care. However, success hinged on three unresolved issues: (1) payment reform that rewards cognitive work, (2) EHR redesign for usability, and (3) expanding the primary care workforce through loan repayment and residency funding. Note: This write-up is based on data and