Watson Diane E, Katz Alan, Reid Robert J, Bogdanovic Bogdan, Roos Noralou, Heppner Petra
Manitoba Centre for Health Policy, Department of Community Health Sciences, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
CMAJ. 2004 Aug 17;171(4):339-42. doi: 10.1503/cmaj.1031047.
Current perceptions of family physician (FP) shortages in Canada have prompted policies to expand medical schools. Our objective was to assess how FP supply, workloads and access to care have changed over the past decade.
We used an anonymized physician and population registry and administrative health service data from Winnipeg for the period 1991/92 to 2000/01. We calculated the following measures of supply and workload: ratios of FPs to population, of population to FPs and of FP full-time equivalents (FTEs) to population, as well as FP activity ratios (sum of FTEs/number of FPs), annual number of visits per FP and visits per FP per full-time day of work. Trends in FP remuneration were analyzed by age and sex. We also measured standardized visit rates and stratified the analysis by populations deemed at risk of needing FP services.
In 2000/01 FPs between 30 and 49 years of age (64% of the workforce) provided 20% fewer visits per year than their same-age peers did 10 years previously. Conversely, FPs 60 to 69 years of age (11% of the workforce) provided 33% more visits per year than the corresponding group a decade earlier. On a per capita basis, the number of FPs declined by 5%, from 97 per 100 000 population in 1991/92 to 92 per 100 000 population in 2000/01, which paralleled changes in national estimates of FP supply. Per capita visit rates among Winnipeg citizens (3.5 per year in 2000/01) and average workloads among FPs (4193 visits per year in 2000/01) were stable over the decade.
Despite relative homeostasis in aggregate FP supply and use, there have been substantial temporal shifts in the volume of services provided by FPs of different age groups. Younger FPs are providing many fewer visits and older FPs are providing many more visits than their same-age predecessors did 10 years ago, a finding that was independent of physician sex. Given these data, the perpetual focus of policy-makers and care providers on increasing numbers of FPs will not help in diagnosing or treating issues of supply, workloads and access to care.
当前对加拿大全科医生(FP)短缺的认知促使政府出台了扩大医学院校规模的政策。我们的目标是评估过去十年间全科医生的供给、工作量以及医疗服务可及性发生了怎样的变化。
我们使用了来自温尼伯的匿名医生和人口登记信息以及1991/92至2000/01期间的行政卫生服务数据。我们计算了以下供给和工作量指标:全科医生与人口的比率、人口与全科医生的比率、全科医生全职当量(FTE)与人口的比率,以及全科医生活动率(FTE总和/全科医生数量)、每位全科医生的年度就诊次数以及每位全科医生每个全职工作日的就诊次数。按年龄和性别分析了全科医生薪酬的趋势。我们还测量了标准化就诊率,并按被认为有需要全科医生服务风险的人群进行分层分析。
在2000/01年,30至49岁的全科医生(占劳动力的64%)每年提供的就诊次数比10年前同年龄段的同行少20%。相反,60至69岁的全科医生(占劳动力的11%)每年提供的就诊次数比十年前相应群体多33%。按人均计算,全科医生数量下降了5%,从1991/92年每10万人口97人降至2000/01年每10万人口92人,这与全国全科医生供给估计的变化情况一致。在这十年间,温尼伯市民的人均就诊率(2000/01年为每年3.5次)和全科医生的平均工作量(2000/01年为每年4193次就诊)保持稳定。
尽管全科医生的总体供给和使用相对稳定,但不同年龄组的全科医生提供的服务量在时间上有显著变化。与10年前同年龄段的前辈相比,年轻的全科医生提供的就诊次数大幅减少,而年长的全科医生提供的就诊次数大幅增加,这一发现与医生性别无关。鉴于这些数据,政策制定者和医疗服务提供者一直将重点放在增加全科医生数量上,这无助于诊断或解决供给、工作量和医疗服务可及性方面的问题。