del Aguila Michael A, Leggott Penelope J, Robertson Paul B, Porterfield Denise L, Felber Gene D
Delta Dental Data and Analysis Center, Seattle, WA, USA.
J Am Dent Assoc. 2005 Jun;136(6):790-6. doi: 10.14219/jada.archive.2005.0265.
Women make up about 14 percent of general dentists in the United States, and the proportion is projected to exceed 29 percent by 2020.
The authors obtained dental benefits claims data from the Washington Dental Service (WDS), Seattle, and used them to examine the practice patterns of 265 women and 1,947 men engaged in general dentistry for at least 26 days in 2001. Practice variables of interest included age, days worked, procedures performed and total income from WDS reimbursements and patient copayments. The number, age and sex of patients treated also were obtained. Using productivity data, the authors also estimated the potential impact of an increase in the percentage of female dentists in the state.
The authors found no differences between male and female dentists in the number of procedures per patient, income per patient or income per day of work. Frequency distributions of various services were highly similar for both groups. Multiple regression models showed no influence of dentist's sex on total income. However, the mean and median numbers of days worked were about 10 percent lower for female dentists than for male dentists. This difference was consistent with the finding that female dentists treated approximately 10 percent fewer patients, performed about 10 percent fewer procedures and had a combined income of about 10 percent less than that of male dentists.
Practice patterns of male and female dentists generally were equivalent in this WDS population.
Female and male dentists provided a similar range of services and earned an equal income per patient treated and per day worked. However, women worked fewer days per year than did men, irrespective of age. If the dental work force and practice patterns remain unchanged otherwise, the total number of patients treated per dentist will decrease slightly as women make up an increasing proportion of dentists.
在美国,女性占普通牙医总数的约14%,预计到2020年这一比例将超过29%。
作者从西雅图的华盛顿牙科服务机构(WDS)获取了牙科福利索赔数据,并用于研究2001年从事普通牙科工作至少26天的265名女性和1947名男性的执业模式。感兴趣的执业变量包括年龄、工作天数、所实施的诊疗程序以及来自WDS报销和患者自付费用的总收入。还获取了接受治疗的患者数量、年龄和性别。利用生产率数据,作者还估计了该州女性牙医比例增加可能产生的影响。
作者发现,男女牙医在每位患者的诊疗程序数量、每位患者的收入或每日工作收入方面没有差异。两组各种服务的频率分布高度相似。多元回归模型显示牙医性别对总收入没有影响。然而,女性牙医的平均和中位数工作天数比男性牙医低约10%。这一差异与以下发现一致:女性牙医治疗的患者数量比男性牙医少约10%,实施的诊疗程序少约10%,总收入比男性牙医少约10%。
在这个WDS人群中,男女牙医的执业模式总体相当。
男女牙医提供的服务范围相似,每位接受治疗的患者以及每日工作的收入相当。然而,无论年龄如何,女性每年工作的天数都比男性少。如果牙科劳动力和执业模式在其他方面保持不变,随着女性在牙医中所占比例的增加,每位牙医治疗的患者总数将略有下降。