Rosenblatt R A, Lishner D M
Department of Family Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle 98195.
West J Med. 1991 Jan;154(1):43-50.
Although the supply of physicians in the United States has doubled during the past 20 years, there is still disagreement as to whether we currently have or should expect a significant surplus of physicians. The evidence suggests that despite the rapid expansion in the pool of available physicians, serious physician shortages persist for certain rural populations, ethnic and occupational groups, and other medically disadvantaged segments of the population. Medical students' declining interest in rural practice and primary care specialties suggests that problems of geographic and specialty maldistribution may worsen despite a rising population of physicians. It is unlikely that a significant physician surplus will develop unless there is a conscious attempt to limit the proportion of national wealth expended on medical care. Pockets of shortage can be reduced by broadening the availability of health insurance, lessening large income disparities between different specialties, changing the way teaching institutions are reimbursed for their training costs, and supporting direct governmental service programs such as the National Health Service Corps.
尽管在过去20年里美国医生的供应量翻了一番,但对于我们目前是否存在或是否应该预期医生会大量过剩,仍存在分歧。有证据表明,尽管可供选择的医生数量迅速增加,但某些农村人口、种族和职业群体以及其他医疗条件不利的人群仍然严重缺乏医生。医科学生对农村医疗和初级保健专业兴趣的下降表明,尽管医生人数不断增加,但地理分布和专业分布不均的问题可能会恶化。除非有意识地限制用于医疗保健的国家财富比例,否则不太可能出现大量医生过剩的情况。可以通过扩大医疗保险的覆盖面、缩小不同专业之间的巨大收入差距、改变教学机构培训费用的报销方式以及支持诸如国家卫生服务队之类的直接政府服务项目来减少短缺地区。