Arnold Ryan W, Goske Marilyn J, Bulas Dorothy I, Benya Ellen C, Ying Jun, Sunshine Jonathan H
Department of Radiology, Aultman Hospital/NEOUCOM Radiology Residency Program, Canton, Ohio, USA.
J Am Coll Radiol. 2009 Sep;6(9):635-42. doi: 10.1016/j.jacr.2009.05.005.
Persistent workforce shortages exist in some radiology subspecialties. Residents' motivations for selecting particular fellowships, as well as their perceptions of the subspecialty fields, heavily influence the supply of new radiologists to these areas. The authors investigated the factors residents consider most important in subspecialty choice, fellowship choice patterns between 1999 and 2008, and changes that might attract residents to one particular shortage field: pediatric radiology.
An online questionnaire was developed and sent to 1,000 radiology trainees in the United States using contact information from the ACR's national resident database. Anonymized responses were evaluated using analysis of variance and logistic regression models.
Leading factors for fellowship selection were "area of strong personal interest," "advanced/multimodality imaging," and "intellectual challenge." Compensation ranked low, 13th among 20 factors. Large shifts in subspecialty preference were seen between 1999 and 2008. Those with a pediatric radiology preference ranked "physician-physician interaction," "physician-patient contact," and "altruism" higher than respondents selecting other subspecialties. Respondents believed that pediatric radiologists make less money than other subspecialists ($325,000 vs $385,000 per year). There was no association between choosing pediatric radiology and gender, age, research plans, or parental status.
Multiple factors account for subspecialty selection among residents, and it is useful to understand these factors when attempting to recruit residents to specific subspecialties. To ease the workforce shortage in pediatric radiology, advanced and varied imaging modalities, numerous job opportunities, and well-paid private practice positions should be emphasized to residents.
某些放射学亚专业存在持续的劳动力短缺。住院医师选择特定专科培训项目的动机以及他们对这些亚专业领域的看法,在很大程度上影响着这些领域新放射科医生的供应。作者调查了住院医师在亚专业选择中认为最重要的因素、1999年至2008年间的专科培训项目选择模式,以及可能吸引住院医师进入一个特定短缺领域——儿科放射学的变化因素。
设计了一份在线问卷,并利用美国放射学会国家住院医师数据库中的联系信息,将问卷发送给了美国的1000名放射学实习生。使用方差分析和逻辑回归模型对匿名回复进行评估。
专科培训项目选择的主要因素是“个人强烈感兴趣的领域”“先进/多模态成像”和“智力挑战”。薪酬排名较低,在20个因素中位列第13。1999年至2008年间,亚专业偏好发生了很大变化。那些偏好儿科放射学的人将“医生与医生的互动”“医生与患者的接触”和“利他主义”的排名,高于选择其他亚专业的受访者。受访者认为儿科放射科医生的收入低于其他亚专科医生(每年32.5万美元对38.5万美元)。选择儿科放射学与性别、年龄、研究计划或父母身份之间没有关联。
住院医师的亚专业选择受多种因素影响,在试图招募住院医师进入特定亚专业时,了解这些因素很有用。为缓解儿科放射学的劳动力短缺,应向住院医师强调先进多样的成像模式、众多的工作机会以及高薪的私人执业职位。