Maine · Safety & Health

Primary Care Physicians (civilian) in Maine

Non-federal primary care doctors (MDs and DOs) per 100,000 civilians, counting all primary care specialties.

105 per 100K in 2023

#2 of 50 · Top tier (higher is better)

Maine is better than the 50-state median (79 per 100K). That's a gap of 27 per 100K.

View interactive chart & trend → See full 50-state ranking →

2010 – 2023 · Maine only · interactive chart with US median overlay →

About primary care physicians (civilian)

What this measures: Counts non-federal primary care doctors per 100,000 civilians.

Why it matters: Primary care supply is the front door to the health system. Lower density usually means longer waits, more travel, and worse management of chronic conditions.

Watch out: This measures provider supply, not actual patient access. A state can have many doctors per capita and still have access deserts in rural counties.

Recent trend

YearMaineUS median
2014112 per 100K77 per 100K
2015112 per 100K78 per 100K
2016114 per 100K78 per 100K
2017113 per 100K78 per 100K
2018113 per 100K78 per 100K
2019112 per 100K79 per 100K
2020112 per 100K79 per 100K
2021109 per 100K77 per 100K
2022107 per 100K78 per 100K
2023105 per 100K79 per 100K

Maine vs. neighboring states

Same metric (primary care physicians (civilian)), latest year with full state coverage. Click any name for that state's full report.

StatePrimary Care Physicians (civilian)National rank
New Hampshire 85 per 100K #11 of 50

How Maine compares (2023)

Top 5 best

#1Vermont114 per 100K
#2Maine105 per 100K
#3Massachusetts102 per 100K
#4Oregon95 per 100K
#5Alaska94 per 100K

Bottom 5

#46Texas61 per 100K
#47Oklahoma59 per 100K
#48Nevada58 per 100K
#49Mississippi56 per 100K
#50Utah56 per 100K

Source and methodology

Source: HRSA Area Health Resource File · Direction: higher is better · Unit: per 100K

Download raw CSV (all 50 states, all years)

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