Hughes Susan, Zweifler John, Schafer Sean, Smith Mark A, Athwal Sukhdeep, Blossom H John
Family and Community Medicine, University of California, San Francisco Fresno Medical Education Program, Fresno, CA 93701, USA.
J Rural Health. 2005 Summer;21(3):228-32. doi: 10.1111/j.1748-0361.2005.tb00087.x.
Identify census-derived characteristics of residency graduates' high school communities that predict practice in rural, medically underserved, and high minority-population settings.
Cohort study of 214 graduates of the University of California, San Francisco-Fresno Family Practice Residency Program (UCSF-Fresno) from its establishment in 1970 through 2000. Rural-urban commuting area code; education, racial, and ethnic distribution; median income; population; and federal designation as a medically underserved area were collected for census tracts of each graduate's (1) high school address and (2) practice location.
Twenty-one percent of graduates practice in rural areas, 28% practice in areas with high proportions of minority population (high minority areas), and 35% practice in federally designated medically underserved areas. Graduation from high school in a rural census tract was associated with rural practice (P < .01), Of those practicing in a rural site, 32% graduated from a rural high school, as compared with 11% of nonrural practitioners. Graduation from high school in a census tract with a higher proportion of minorities was associated with practice in a proportionally high minority community (P = .01). For those practicing in a high-minority setting, the median minority percentage of the high school census tract was 31%, compared with 16% for people not practicing in a high minority area. No characteristics of the high school census tract were predictive of practice in a medically underserved area.
Census data from the residency graduate's high school predicted rural practice and practice in a proportionally high minority community, but not in a federally designated medically underserved area.
确定从人口普查得出的住院医师毕业生高中社区的特征,这些特征可预测其在农村、医疗服务欠缺地区和少数族裔人口众多地区的执业情况。
对加利福尼亚大学旧金山分校-弗雷斯诺家庭医学住院医师项目(UCSF-弗雷斯诺)自1970年设立至2000年的214名毕业生进行队列研究。收集每位毕业生(1)高中地址和(2)执业地点所在普查区的城乡通勤区号、教育程度、种族和民族分布、收入中位数、人口数量以及联邦指定的医疗服务欠缺地区信息。
21%的毕业生在农村地区执业,28%在少数族裔人口比例高的地区(高少数族裔地区)执业,35%在联邦指定的医疗服务欠缺地区执业。在农村普查区的高中毕业与在农村执业相关(P <.01)。在农村地区执业的人员中,32%毕业于农村高中,而非农村执业人员的这一比例为11%。在少数族裔比例较高的普查区高中毕业与在相应高少数族裔社区执业相关(P =.01)。对于在高少数族裔环境中执业的人员,其高中普查区的少数族裔百分比中位数为31%,而不在高少数族裔地区执业的人员这一比例为16%。高中普查区的特征无法预测在医疗服务欠缺地区的执业情况。
住院医师毕业生高中的人口普查数据可预测农村执业情况以及在相应高少数族裔社区的执业情况,但无法预测在联邦指定的医疗服务欠缺地区的执业情况。