DeVoe Jennifer, Fryer Jr George E, Hargraves J Lee, Phillips Robert L, Green Larry A
Robert Graham Center for Policy Studies in Family Practice & Primary Care, 1350 Connecticut Ave., Washington, DC, 20036, USA.
J Fam Pract. 2002 Mar;51(3):223-8.
A usual source of care is associated with better health outcomes. Dissatisfaction among family physicians and general practitioners (FP/GPs) may compromise the accessibility of a usual source of care and the quality of services. We examined the association between FP/GP dissatisfaction and an inability to deliver high-quality care.
We performed a secondary data analysis of the Community Tracking Study (CTS) Physician Survey (1996-1997).
The study included a nationally representative sample of more than 12,000 nonfederal physicians practicing direct patient care in the United States.
We measured associations of career dissatisfaction with physicians&rsquo perceptions of their ability to provide high-quality care as defined by 6 survey items. Multivariate analyses controlled for the effects of personal, professional, and practice characteristics.
Among FP/GPs in 1996-1997, more than 17% were dissatisfied. Age was the most significant personal factor associated with dissatisfaction; 25.1% of those aged 55 to 64 years reported dissatisfaction compared with only 10.1% of those younger than 35 years. Other personal or professional characteristics significantly associated with FP/GP dissatisfaction included osteopathic training, graduation from a foreign medical school, full practice ownership, and an income of less than $100,000. Physicians dissatisfied with their careers were much more likely to report difficulties in caring for patients, strongly disagreeing (vs strongly agreeing, odds ratio [OR] 1.0) that they had enough clinical freedom (OR 7.89; 95% confidence interval [CI], 4.86-12.83); continuous patient relationships (OR 7.11; 95% CI, 4.90-10.33); no financial penalties for clinical decisions (OR 4.44; 95% CI, 3.13-6.31); adequate time with patients (OR 4.42; 95% CI, 2.84-6.87); ability to provide quality care (OR 4.26; 95% CI, 2.88-6.31); and sufficient communication with specialists (OR 3.57; CI, 2.20-5.80).
An inability to care for patients is significantly associated with career dissatisfaction. This relationship has implications for the achievement of policy objectives related to access, having a usual source of care, and quality.
常规医疗服务来源与更好的健康结果相关。家庭医生和全科医生(FP/GP)的不满可能会损害常规医疗服务来源的可及性和服务质量。我们研究了FP/GP的不满与无法提供高质量医疗服务之间的关联。
我们对社区追踪研究(CTS)医生调查(1996 - 1997年)进行了二次数据分析。
该研究纳入了在美国从事直接患者护理的12000多名非联邦医生的全国代表性样本。
我们测量了职业不满与医生对其提供高质量医疗服务能力的认知之间的关联,高质量医疗服务由6个调查项目定义。多变量分析控制了个人、专业和执业特征的影响。
在1996 - 1997年的FP/GP中,超过17%的人表示不满。年龄是与不满相关的最显著个人因素;55至64岁的人中有25.1%表示不满,而35岁以下的人中只有10.1%表示不满。与FP/GP不满显著相关的其他个人或专业特征包括整骨疗法培训、毕业于外国医学院、完全拥有执业机构以及收入低于10万美元。对职业不满的医生更有可能报告在照顾患者方面存在困难,强烈不同意(与强烈同意相比,优势比[OR]为1.0)他们有足够的临床自由度(OR 7.89;95%置信区间[CI],4.86 - 12.83);持续的医患关系(OR 7.11;95% CI,4.90 - 10.33);临床决策无经济处罚(OR 4.44;95% CI,3.13 - 6.31);有足够时间与患者相处(OR 4.42;95% CI,2.84 - 6.87);提供高质量医疗服务的能力(OR 4.26;95% CI,2.88 - 6.31);以及与专科医生的充分沟通(OR 3.57;CI,2.20 - 5.80)。
无法照顾患者与职业不满显著相关。这种关系对实现与可及性、拥有常规医疗服务来源和质量相关的政策目标具有影响。