Lewis Rebecca S, Sunshine Jonathan H
Research Department, American College of Radiology, Reston, VA 20191, USA.
Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2007 Oct 1;69(2):518-27. doi: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2007.02.053. Epub 2007 May 10.
To provide an extensive and detailed portrait of radiation oncologists, their professional activities, and the practices in which they work.
We analyzed non-individually identified data from the American College of Radiology's 2003 Survey of Radiation Oncologists, a stratified random sample survey that guaranteed respondents' confidentiality and achieved a 68% response rate, with a total of 472 responses. Responses were weighted to make them representative of all radiation oncologists in the United States. We use two-tailed z tests of percentages and means to compare information from the current survey with those from a similar 1995 survey.
The number of posttraining, professionally active radiation oncologists grew from nearly 2900 in 1995 to nearly 3500 in 2003, an increase of approximately 21%. Twenty-three percent of posttraining, professionally active radiation oncologists were women. Among posttraining, professionally active radiation oncologists, 95% were board-certified. Forty-eight percent of radiation oncologists were in nonacademic, radiation-oncology-only private practices; 20% in academic practice; 14% in nonacademic, multispecialty practices; and 11% in solo practice. The largest percentage of radiation oncologists worked in the South (34%). The average annual number of patients treated (curative and palliative) per radiation oncologist was 264. On average, radiation oncologists preferred a 4% increase in their workload. The proportion of radiation oncologists planning a career change decreased from 8% in 1995 to 4% in 2003, and in 2003 34% said they were enjoying radiation oncology more than 5 years earlier, compared with 21% in 1995.
Despite concerns in 2003 about lower-than-optimal workload, professional satisfaction, if anything, increased since 1995.
全面且详细地描绘放射肿瘤学家、他们的专业活动以及他们工作的机构。
我们分析了美国放射学会2003年放射肿瘤学家调查中的非个体识别数据,这是一项分层随机抽样调查,保证了受访者的保密性,回复率为68%,共收到472份回复。对回复进行加权处理,使其能代表美国所有放射肿瘤学家。我们使用百分比和均值的双尾z检验,将本次调查的信息与1995年类似调查的信息进行比较。
接受培训后从事专业工作的放射肿瘤学家数量从1995年的近2900人增长到2003年的近3500人,增长了约21%。接受培训后从事专业工作的放射肿瘤学家中有23%是女性。在接受培训后从事专业工作的放射肿瘤学家中,95%获得了委员会认证。48%的放射肿瘤学家在非学术性的、仅从事放射肿瘤学的私人诊所工作;20%在学术机构工作;14%在非学术性的多专科诊所工作;11%为个体执业。最大比例的放射肿瘤学家在南方工作(34%)。每位放射肿瘤学家每年治疗的患者(包括根治性和姑息性)平均数量为264例。平均而言,放射肿瘤学家希望工作量增加4%。计划改变职业的放射肿瘤学家比例从1995年的8%降至2003年的4%,并且在2003年,34%的人表示他们比5年前更享受放射肿瘤学工作,而1995年这一比例为21%。
尽管2003年有人担心工作量低于最佳水平,但自1995年以来,职业满意度实际上有所提高。