Weil T P
Bedford Health Associates, Inc., Asheville, NC, USA.
Physician Exec. 1998 Nov-Dec;24(6):42-7.
With health networks searching for additional market share and with a projected 30.2 million to be enrolled in Medicaid HMOs by 2000, more health executives will be weighing various strategies of how to attract qualified physicians to practice in poor inner-city and rural areas. Most frequently cited as solutions are: supplying more physicians, encouraging more medical school graduates to pursue primary care residencies, and modifying the number of international medical graduates entering U.S. residency programs. Part 1 of this article reviews the efficacy of these approaches, while the second part, which will appear in the January/February 1999 issue, explores a more pragmatic option: to simply improve the working conditions and just pay substantially more to physicians who practice in "less desirable" locations.
随着医疗网络寻求更多的市场份额,并且预计到2000年将有3020万人加入医疗补助健康维护组织,更多的医疗管理人员将权衡各种策略,以吸引合格的医生到市中心贫困地区和农村地区执业。最常被提及的解决方案包括:增加医生数量,鼓励更多医学院毕业生从事初级保健住院医师工作,以及调整进入美国住院医师项目的国际医学毕业生数量。本文第一部分回顾了这些方法的有效性,而第二部分将发表在1999年1月/2月号上,探讨一个更务实的选择:简单地改善工作条件,并大幅提高在“不太理想”地区执业的医生的薪酬。