Spiegel Wolfgang, Pichlhöfer Otto, Haoula Diana, Schneider Barbara, Maier Manfred
Department of General Practice, Center for Public Health, Medical University of Vienna, Wahringerstrase 13a, A-1090 Vienna, Austria.
Croat Med J. 2008 Jun;49(3):375-83. doi: 10.3325/cmj.2008.3.375.
To estimate the relative job satisfaction of Austrian family physicians and other specialists with respect to whether or not they obtained training in the desired specialty.
In this cross-sectional study, we re-examined the previous data on allocation of medical training posts in Austria. All board-certified physicians practicing in Vienna were surveyed with a 12-item questionnaire. We analyzed the association between respondents' desired and practiced medical specialty and their answer to the question of whether they thought they would have had greater job satisfaction in a different medical specialty. We also calculated their relative job satisfaction.
Of 8127 licensed physicians, 2736 (34%) completed the questionnaire in two mailings. Of physicians who completed the questionnaire, 50.3% (43.2% of men) did not obtain the training in their desired specialty and 65.1% stated that they had originally desired a different specialty. There was a significant difference in relative job satisfaction between specialists who got their desired medical specialty (n=1005) and those who did not (n=697) (0.95 vs 0.62 of maximum 1, P<0.001). No significant difference in relative job satisfaction was found between family physicians who had originally wanted to become specialists (n=679) and specialists who had originally wanted to become family physicians (n=533; 0.89 vs 0.81; P=0.01; chi(2) test).
A high percentage of family physicians in Austria had originally wanted to become practitioners of a different specialty. Among physicians who did not receive training in their desired medical specialty, family physicians showed a significantly higher relative job satisfaction than specialists. Obtaining the desired medical specialty is a strong predictor of relative job satisfaction among specialists, but not among family physicians.
评估奥地利家庭医生和其他专科医生在是否获得期望专业培训方面的相对工作满意度。
在这项横断面研究中,我们重新审视了奥地利医学培训岗位分配的先前数据。对所有在维也纳执业的获得委员会认证的医生进行了一项包含12个条目的问卷调查。我们分析了受访者期望的医学专业与实际从事的医学专业之间的关联,以及他们对在不同医学专业中是否会有更高工作满意度这一问题的回答。我们还计算了他们的相对工作满意度。
在8127名持照医生中,2736名(34%)在两次邮寄调查中完成了问卷。在完成问卷的医生中,50.3%(男性为43.2%)未获得期望专业的培训,65.1%表示他们原本期望的是不同专业。获得期望医学专业的专科医生(n = 1005)和未获得的专科医生(n = 697)之间的相对工作满意度存在显著差异(分别为0.95和0.62,满分1,P < 0.001)。原本想成为专科医生的家庭医生(n = 679)和原本想成为家庭医生的专科医生(n = 533)之间,相对工作满意度没有显著差异(分别为0.89和0.81;P = 0.01;卡方检验)。
奥地利有很大比例的家庭医生原本想成为其他专业的从业者。在未获得期望医学专业培训的医生中,家庭医生的相对工作满意度显著高于专科医生。获得期望的医学专业是专科医生相对工作满意度的有力预测因素,但对家庭医生而言并非如此。