>.... The matching challenge comes as the U.S. faces a physician shortage. The nation could be short as many as 139,000 physicians by 2033, according to the Times, which cites Association of American Medical Colleges data. Despite this shortage, thousands of medical school graduates are consistently rejected from residency experience, rendering their MD or DO "virtually useless," according to the report.
https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/hospital-physician-rel...
From that article you cited: International medical graduates in particular have low match rates for residency programs. American medical students have a 94 percent match rate, according to the Times, which cites information from the National Resident Matching Program. However, Americans who study at international medical schools have a match rate of 61 percent."
Kids from the U.S. get sold on a Caribbean M.D. school, and spend thousands and thousands of dollars only to find out that things get really complicated when it comes time to do clerkship rotations or apply to residency.
An M.D. or a D.O. from a school on U.S. soil is definitely not useless, and your chances at matching a residency are extremely high, as cited above.