Sturm Roland
RAND, Santa Monica, Calif 90401, USA.
J Am Board Fam Pract. 2002 Sep-Oct;15(5):367-77.
The shift away from third party insurers to risk-sharing arrangements affecting care management and clinicians could be the most fundamental change in the health care system. Analysis was undertaken to study how managed care, practice setting, and financial arrangements affect physicians' perceived impact on their practice.
Data were taken from the Community Tracking Study (CTS) physician survey, a national survey of active physicians in the United States fielded between August 1996 and August 1997. Survey instruments were completed by 7,146 primary care physicians in internal medicine (2,355), family practice (3,168), and pediatrics (1,623). The dependent variables are career satisfaction and perceived limitations and pressures on time spent with patients, clinical freedom, income, and continuity. To study the unique effect of financing and gatekeeping arrangements and practice setting, the dependent variables were regressed on gatekeeping, practice revenue, individual physician compensation, practice setting, specialty, age-group, sex, international medical graduate, board certification, and recent change in practice ownership.
Total managed care revenue, or individual physician incentives, have no effect on career satisfaction and relatively limited effects on time pressure, income pressure, or patient continuity. In contrast, primary care gatekeeping has a highly significant adverse effect on the same outcome measures. After controlling for financial factors, demographic characteristics, and training differences, physicians in solo and 2-physician practices are significantly more likely to be dissatisfied with their medical career, more likely to report no clinical freedom, and more likely to feel income pressure than physicians in group practices, staff model HMOs, medical schools, or other settings.
Physicians in solo and 2-physician practices were least satisfied with their careers and reported more constraints on their clinical freedom and income than physicians in other settings. Physicians in group practices or staff model HMOs are more likely to report time pressure than physicians in solo or 2-physician practices. Family practice falls between internal medicine (less satisfied, more practice constraints) and pediatrics (more satisfied, fewer practice constraints).
从第三方保险公司转向影响医疗管理和临床医生的风险分担安排,可能是医疗保健系统最根本的变革。本研究旨在分析管理式医疗、执业环境和财务安排如何影响医生对其执业的感知影响。
数据取自社区追踪研究(CTS)医生调查,这是一项对1996年8月至1997年8月期间美国在职医生进行的全国性调查。7146名内科(2355名)、家庭医学(3168名)和儿科(1623名)的初级保健医生完成了调查问卷。因变量包括职业满意度以及在与患者相处时间、临床自主权、收入和连续性方面感知到的限制和压力。为研究融资和把关安排以及执业环境的独特影响,将因变量对把关、执业收入、个体医生薪酬、执业环境、专业、年龄组、性别、国际医学毕业生、委员会认证以及执业所有权的近期变化进行回归分析。
管理式医疗的总收入或个体医生激励措施对职业满意度没有影响,对时间压力、收入压力或患者连续性的影响相对有限。相比之下,初级保健把关对相同的结果指标有非常显著的不利影响。在控制了财务因素、人口特征和培训差异后,与团体执业、员工模式健康维护组织、医学院或其他环境中的医生相比,个体执业和两名医生执业的医生对其医疗职业明显更不满意,更有可能报告没有临床自主权,也更有可能感到收入压力。
个体执业和两名医生执业的医生对其职业最不满意,并且报告称与其他环境中的医生相比,他们在临床自主权和收入方面受到更多限制。团体执业或员工模式健康维护组织中的医生比个体执业或两名医生执业的医生更有可能报告时间压力。家庭医学介于内科(满意度较低,执业限制较多)和儿科(满意度较高,执业限制较少)之间。