Kimball Alexa Boer, Resneck Jack S
Department of Dermatology, Harvard University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
J Am Acad Dermatol. 2008 Nov;59(5):741-5. doi: 10.1016/j.jaad.2008.06.037. Epub 2008 Aug 23.
Since 1999, multiple surveys have documented a stable undersupply of dermatologic services in the United States. Factors contributing to the imbalance include changes in the demographics of the physician workforce, increased demand for services, and a limited number of training positions for new physicians. In response to the demand, there has also been a substantial influx of nonphysician clinicians into dermatology offices.
We sought to follow up the large data set collected by the American Academy of Dermatology in 2002; the survey was repeated in 2005 and 2007. Response rates ranged from 30% to 35% and included more than 1200 respondents each year.
Few changes were noted in the metrics used to assess the balance of supply and demand in the US dermatology workforce between 2002 and 2007. Mean wait times for new patient appointments decreased slightly from 36 to 33 days. One third of practices continue to seek additional dermatologists. In 2007, 23% of practices reported employing a physician assistant and 10% a nurse practitioner (up from 15% and 8% in 2002). In 2007, typical dermatologists continued to spend the bulk of their direct patient care time in medical dermatology (23.9 hours, 63%), followed by surgery (10.2 hours, 27%), and then cosmetic dermatology (3.8 hours, 10%). A substantial subset of dermatologists (29%) spent half or more of their time in surgical and cosmetic dermatology combined. Although female dermatologists worked fewer total hours, they spent equal time caring for patients with medical dermatologic conditions, less time in surgical dermatology, and more time in cosmetic dermatology.
The survey is potentially subject to inaccurate self-report and response bias. Although the results shed light on patient access and the dermatology workforce, they do not establish or quantify any impact on patients' health.
Between 2002 and 2007, despite continued increases in the number of nonphysician clinicians in US dermatology offices, there were only small changes in the overall metrics commonly used to assess workforce balance. These findings suggest persistent unmet demand, but, given divergent trends of ongoing increases in surgical and cosmetic dermatology, growth in the use of physician assistants and nurse practitioners, and an aging and expanding US population, the future balance of supply and demand remains difficult to predict. Nevertheless, careful workforce planning and deliberative consideration of the risks and benefits of rapidly emerging changes in the delivery of dermatologic care are essential to ensure access to high-quality care for patients with skin disease.
自1999年以来,多项调查表明美国皮肤科服务一直存在稳定的供应不足情况。导致这种不平衡的因素包括医师劳动力人口结构的变化、服务需求的增加以及新医师培训岗位数量有限。为了应对需求,非医师临床医生也大量涌入皮肤科诊所。
我们试图对美国皮肤科协会在2002年收集的大型数据集进行跟踪研究;该调查于2005年和2007年重复进行。回复率在30%至35%之间,每年有超过1200名受访者。
2002年至2007年期间,用于评估美国皮肤科劳动力供需平衡的指标几乎没有变化。新患者预约的平均等待时间从36天略有下降至33天。三分之一的诊所仍在寻求更多皮肤科医生。2007年,23%的诊所报告雇佣了医师助理,10%雇佣了执业护士(2002年分别为15%和8%)。2007年,普通皮肤科医生在直接患者护理上的大部分时间仍用于医学皮肤科(23.9小时,占63%),其次是外科皮肤科(10.2小时,占27%),然后是美容皮肤科(3.8小时,占10%)。相当一部分皮肤科医生(29%)将一半或更多时间用于外科和美容皮肤科。尽管女皮肤科医生的总工作时长较少,但她们在照顾医学皮肤病患者上花费的时间相同,在外科皮肤科花费的时间较少,而在美容皮肤科花费的时间较多。
该调查可能存在自我报告不准确和回复偏差的问题。尽管结果揭示了患者就医机会和皮肤科劳动力情况,但并未确定或量化对患者健康的任何影响。
2002年至2007年期间,尽管美国皮肤科诊所中非医师临床医生的数量持续增加,但用于评估劳动力平衡的总体指标仅有微小变化。这些发现表明需求仍未得到满足,但考虑到外科和美容皮肤科持续增长的不同趋势、医师助理和执业护士使用的增加以及美国人口的老龄化和增长,未来的供需平衡仍难以预测。然而,精心的劳动力规划以及对皮肤科护理服务中迅速出现的变化所带来的风险和益处进行审慎考虑,对于确保皮肤病患者获得高质量护理至关重要。