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INTRODUCTION: Over one-quarter of America's gynecologic surgical subspecialists will retire within 5 years, and we're replacing less than half of them—leaving millions of women without access to the complex pelvic surgery they need. OBJECTIVE: To quantify retirement rates among gynecologic surgical subspecialists (URPS, Gynecologic Oncology, MIGS) and determine whether current fellowship output adequately replaces retiring workforce, using multi-source retirement detection and Monte Carlo workforce projections through 2030. METHODS: We developed a 7-source retirement detection system integrating Medicare Part B/D cessation, NPPES deactivation, Open Payments cessation, Physician Compare changes, and state medical board licensing data. The system was validated using state license status changes and birth year data, then applied to the complete nationwide OB/GYN physician population. Monte Carlo simulations (1,000 iterations) projected 2025–2030 national workforce changes incorporating fellowship pipeline data (FPMRS: 235 graduates; GO: 300 graduates; MIGS: 255 graduates over 5 years). RESULTS: A nationwide analysis reveals subspecialty-specific workforce crises with differential retirement rates: Gynecologic Oncology shows the highest retirement risk at 7.43% annually, followed by FPMRS at 6.24%, and MIGS at 4.91%. Despite active fellowship pipelines, projections reveal: FPMRS declines 10.3% (1,236→1,109 physicians; 95% CI: 1,083–1,136) with a replacement ratio of 0.65, and Gynecologic Oncology declines 11.0% (1,292→1,150; 95% CI: 1,121–1,179) with a replacement ratio of 0.71. Only MIGS demonstrates growth at 10.4% (716→791; 95% CI: 771–810) with a replacement ratio of 1.36. Geographic analysis reveals metropolitan concentration of new graduates while rural areas lose retiring subspecialists. CONCLUSIONS: Current fellowship output fails to replace retiring URPS and Gynecologic Oncology subspecialists despite training expansion, threatening nationwide access to complex prolapse surgery and oncologic procedures. Multi-source retirement detection, combined with state medical board validation, provides a gold-standard methodology for workforce planning. Urgent interventions needed: expanded fellowship positions in URPS/GO, geographic distribution incentives, and accelerated training pathways. Without intervention, millions face reduced access to subspecialty gynecologic surgery by 2030.Figure 1
Published in: Obstetrics and Gynecology
Volume 147, Issue 4S, pp. 7S-7S