Division of Community and Family Medicine, Centre for Community Medicine, Jichi Medical University, Tochigi, Japan.
Hum Resour Health. 2009 Feb 18;7:12. doi: 10.1186/1478-4491-7-12.
In many countries, there is a surplus of physicians in some communities and a shortage in others. Population size is known to be correlated with the number of physicians in a community, and is conventionally considered to represent the power of communities to attract physicians. However, associations between other demographic/economic variables and the number of physicians in a community have not been fully evaluated. This study seeks other parameters that correlate with the physician population and show which characteristics of a community determine its "attractiveness" to physicians.
Associations between the number of physicians and selected demographic/economic/life-related variables of all of Japan's 3132 municipalities were examined. In order to exclude the confounding effect of community size, correlations between the physician-to-population ratio and other variable-to-population ratios or variable-to-area ratios were evaluated with simple correlation and multiple regression analyses. The equity of physician distribution against each variable was evaluated by the orenz curve and Gini index.
Among the 21 variables selected, the service industry workers-to-population ratio (0.543), commercial land price (0.527), sales of goods per person (0.472), and daytime population density (0.451) were better correlated with the physician-to-population ratio than was population density (0.409). Multiple regression analysis showed that the service industry worker-to-population ratio, the daytime population density, and the elderly rate were each independently correlated with the physician-to-population ratio (standardized regression coefficient 0.393, 0.355, 0.089 respectively; each p<0.001). Equity of physician distribution was higher against service industry population (Gini index=0.26) and daytime population (0.28) than against population (0.33).
Daytime population and service industry population in a municipality are better parameters of community attractiveness to physicians than population. Because attractiveness is supposed to consist of medical demand and the amenities of urban life, the two parameters may represent the amount of medical demand and/or the extent of urban amenities of the community more precisely than population does. The conventional demand-supply analysis based solely on population as the demand parameter may overestimate the inequity of the physician distribution among communities.
在许多国家,一些社区的医生过剩,而另一些社区则短缺。众所周知,人口规模与社区中的医生数量相关,通常被认为代表了社区吸引医生的能力。然而,其他人口统计学/经济变量与社区中医生数量之间的关联尚未得到充分评估。本研究旨在寻找与医生人数相关的其他参数,并展示社区的哪些特征决定了其对医生的“吸引力”。
研究人员检查了日本 3132 个市町村的医生人数与选定的人口统计学/经济/生活相关变量之间的关联。为了排除社区规模的混杂影响,研究人员使用简单相关和多元回归分析评估了医生与人口比与其他变量与人口比或变量与面积比之间的相关性。通过 Orenz 曲线和基尼指数评估了每个变量的医生分布公平性。
在所选择的 21 个变量中,服务业就业人口与人口比(0.543)、商业土地价格(0.527)、人均销售额(0.472)和日间人口密度(0.451)与医生与人口比的相关性优于人口密度(0.409)。多元回归分析显示,服务业就业人口与人口比、日间人口密度和老年人口比例均与医生与人口比独立相关(标准化回归系数分别为 0.393、0.355 和 0.089;p 值均<0.001)。与人口相比,医生分布的公平性更高,针对服务业人口(基尼指数=0.26)和日间人口(0.28)。
市町村的日间人口和服务业人口是衡量社区对医生吸引力的更好参数,而不是人口。由于吸引力应该包括医疗需求和城市生活的便利设施,这两个参数可能比人口更能准确地代表社区的医疗需求和/或城市便利设施的程度。仅基于人口作为需求参数的传统供需分析可能会高估社区间医生分布的不公平性。