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Florida’s Live Healthy Act shows early promise one year later
TTallahassee

Florida’s Live Healthy Act shows early promise one year later

  • October 14, 2025

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (WCTV/Gray Florida Capital Bureau) -Healthcare is becoming easier to access across Florida, according to state regulators and medical providers who say the comprehensive Live Healthy Act is working as intended one year after implementation.

The sweeping 2024 legislation was designed to expand Florida’s health workforce, particularly in underserved areas, as the state faces a projected shortage of about 18,000 doctors by 2035. With roughly 1,000 people moving into Florida daily, accessing medical care has become increasingly challenging.

“I think this program is going to do some great things for the state of Florida,” said Temple Robinson, CEO of Bond Community Health Center in Tallahassee.

The Live Healthy Act tackles the healthcare shortage through multiple approaches, including expanding programs to attract medical professionals and adding residency programs throughout the state.

Robinson told lawmakers during the opening week of committees for the upcoming legislative session that the programs provide crucial support for healthcare facilities training the next generation of doctors.

“It helps the health centers and the doctors’ offices, offset some of the costs and the administrative burden, teaching students while you’re also trying to care for patients,” Robinson said.

The hands-on training component is proving particularly valuable for medical students. “They get to see real-world medicine. And then they can make decisions and hopefully those decisions are to stay in our area and care for underserved people,” Robinson said.

Rural healthcare facilities, which have struggled to maintain operations in recent years, are also experiencing positive impacts from the legislation. Lauren Faison-Clark, CEO at Doctors’ Memorial Hospital in Perry, said the support is essential for small community hospitals.

“It’s very difficult to continue to provide the kind of access needed in small communities without some kind of support,” Faison-Clark said.

In an era when rural hospitals nationwide are closing, Doctors’ Memorial is actually expanding thanks to Live Healthy funding. “A lot of hospitals like ours, we literally live month to month and we don’t have those extra capital dollars to put for new equipment and things that are essential in providing high-quality care,” Faison-Clark said.

While it will take several years to see the full effect of the Live Healthy Act, the consensus among lawmakers, state agencies and the medical community is that Florida is heading in the right direction toward addressing its healthcare workforce challenges.

Copyright 2025 WCTV. All rights reserved.

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