Hall K N, Wakeman M A, Levy R C, Khoury J
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City.
Ann Emerg Med. 1992 Mar;21(3):291-7. doi: 10.1016/s0196-0644(05)80890-x.
To test the hypothesis that residency-trained emergency physicians who left the practice of emergency medicine do not differ significantly from those who continue to practice.
A retrospective cohort study using a mailed questionnaire.
Eight hundred fifty-eight emergency medicine residency graduates from 1978 through 1982.
A mailed questionnaire was used to obtain data from the study population. Individuals who did not respond to the first mailing were sent a second survey six weeks later. A sample of 10% of nonrespondents was contacted by telephone and compared with respondents on five variables. Respondents were divided into physicians who continued to practice emergency medicine and those who had elected to leave the specialty. The variables used to compare the two groups included personal and professional demographics, career satisfaction, and satisfaction with training. chi 2, Fisher's exact t-test, and logistic regression were used to analyze the data with an a priori level of significance set at .05.
There were 539 complete responses for a response rate of 62.8%. No statistical differences between responders and nonresponders were identified. The ten-year survival rate of respondents was 84.9%. Those who left emergency medicine were less likely to be board certified in emergency medicine (P less than .001), were more likely to be board certified in another field (P = .001), were less likely to work with residents during their emergency medicine practice (P = .009), and were more likely to report an annual gross income of less than $100,000 per year (P less than .001). Emergency physicians who have left the field were less likely to report being satisfied or very satisfied with their initial choice of emergency medicine as a specialty (P = .001). There was no difference in satisfaction with the quality of emergency medicine residency training (P = .183).
Career longevity of residency-trained emergency physicians has been greater than early predictions. Interactions with residents, higher income, satisfaction with training decision, and board certification in emergency medicine are variables associated with a higher retention rate.
检验以下假设:完成住院医师培训的急诊医生中,离开急诊医学领域的医生与继续从事该领域工作的医生没有显著差异。
采用邮寄问卷的回顾性队列研究。
1978年至1982年毕业的858名急诊医学住院医师。
通过邮寄问卷从研究人群中获取数据。未回复首次邮寄问卷的个体在六周后会收到第二次调查。对10%未回复者进行电话随访,并在五个变量上与回复者进行比较。回复者被分为继续从事急诊医学工作的医生和选择离开该专业的医生。用于比较两组的变量包括个人和职业人口统计学特征、职业满意度以及对培训的满意度。使用卡方检验、费舍尔精确t检验和逻辑回归对数据进行分析,预先设定的显著性水平为0.05。
共收到539份完整回复,回复率为62.8%。未发现回复者与未回复者之间存在统计学差异。回复者的十年生存率为84.9%。离开急诊医学领域的医生获得急诊医学专业委员会认证的可能性较小(P<0.001),获得其他领域专业委员会认证的可能性较大(P = 0.001),在从事急诊医学工作期间与住院医师一起工作的可能性较小(P = 0.009),且更有可能报告年收入低于10万美元(P<0.001)。离开该领域的急诊医生对最初选择急诊医学作为专业的满意度或非常满意度较低(P = 0.001)。对急诊医学住院医师培训质量的满意度没有差异(P = 0.183)。
完成住院医师培训的急诊医生的职业寿命比早期预测的要长。与住院医师的互动、较高的收入、对培训决策的满意度以及急诊医学专业委员会认证是与较高留用率相关的变量。