Rittenhouse Diane R, Fryer George E, Phillips Robert L, Miyoshi Thomas, Nielsen Christine, Goodman David C, Grumbach Kevin
Department of Family and Community Medicine and Center for California Health Workforce Studies, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143-0900, USA.
Ann Fam Med. 2008 Sep-Oct;6(5):397-405. doi: 10.1370/afm.885.
Community health centers (CHCs) are a critical component of the health care safety net. President Bush's recent effort to expand CHC capacity coincides with difficulty recruiting primary care physicians and substantial cuts in federal grant programs designed to prepare and motivate physicians to practice in underserved settings. This article examines the association between physicians' attendance in training programs funded by Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) Title VII Section 747 Primary Care Training Grants and 2 outcome variables: work in a CHC and participation in the National Health Service Corps Loan Repayment Program (NHSC LRP).
We linked the 2004 American Medical Association Physician Master-file to HRSA Title VII grants files, Medicare claims data, and data from the NHSC. We then conducted retrospective analyses to compare the proportions of physicians working in CHCs among physicians who either had or had not attended Title VII-funded medical schools or residency programs and to determine the association between having attended Title VII-funded residency programs and subsequent NHSC LRP participation.
Three percent (5,934) of physicians who had attended Title VII-funded medical schools worked in CHCs in 2001-2003, compared with 1.9% of physicians who attended medical schools without Title VII funding (P<.001). We found a similar association between Title VII funding during residency and subsequent work in CHCs. These associations remained significant (P<.001) in logistic regression models controlling for NHSC participation, public vs private medical school, residency completion date, and physician sex. A strong association was also found between attending Title VII-funded residency programs and participation in the NHSC LRP, controlling for year completed training, physician sex, and private vs public medical school.
Continued federal support of Title VII training grant programs is consistent with federal efforts to increase participation in the NHSC and improve access to quality health care for underserved populations through expanded CHC capacity.
社区卫生中心(CHC)是医疗安全网的关键组成部分。布什总统近期扩大社区卫生中心服务能力的举措,恰逢招募初级保健医生困难以及联邦资助项目大幅削减,这些项目旨在培养和激励医生在服务欠缺地区执业。本文探讨了由卫生资源与服务管理局(HRSA)的《第七章第747节初级保健培训拨款》资助的培训项目中医生的参与情况与两个结果变量之间的关联:在社区卫生中心工作以及参与国家卫生服务团贷款偿还计划(NHSC LRP)。
我们将2004年美国医学协会医生主档案与HRSA《第七章》拨款文件、医疗保险理赔数据以及国家卫生服务团的数据相链接。然后进行回顾性分析,以比较曾就读于由《第七章》资助的医学院或住院医师培训项目的医生与未就读此类项目的医生中在社区卫生中心工作的比例,并确定参与由《第七章》资助的住院医师培训项目与随后参与NHSC LRP之间的关联。
2001 - 2003年,曾就读于由《第七章》资助的医学院的医生中有3%(5934人)在社区卫生中心工作,而就读于未获《第七章》资助医学院的医生这一比例为1.9%(P <.001)。我们发现住院医师培训期间获得《第七章》资助与随后在社区卫生中心工作之间存在类似关联。在控制了NHSC参与情况、公立与私立医学院、住院医师培训完成日期以及医生性别等因素的逻辑回归模型中,这些关联仍然显著(P <.001)。在控制了培训完成年份、医生性别以及私立与公立医学院等因素后,还发现参与由《第七章》资助的住院医师培训项目与参与NHSC LRP之间存在强烈关联。
联邦政府对《第七章》培训拨款项目的持续支持,与联邦政府通过扩大社区卫生中心服务能力来增加参与NHSC以及改善服务欠缺人群获得优质医疗服务机会的努力相一致。