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This article was prepared with the assistance of ABIL, the Alliance of Business Immigration Lawyers, of which Loan Huynh is an active member.

According to reports, hundreds of doctors who were expected to begin medical residencies at U.S. hospitals shortly are stuck in “visa limbo” because of delays, an inability to make J-1 visa appointments and/or additional vetting, despite the Department of State’s recent announcement that interviews could resume. Others have been unable to enter the United States due to the Trump administration’s travel (entry) ban on 19 countries. This year, more than 6,600 non-U.S. citizen doctors were accepted into residency programs. Many such residencies are supposed to start on July 1, 2025.

Concerns include the cost of medical exams and upending of international doctors’ plans to come to the United States; shortages of doctors in some communities, including medically underserved areas; and effects on U.S. hospitals and patients.

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