Wenghofer Elizabeth F, Timony Patrick E, Pong Raymond W
Laurentian University, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada.
Rural Remote Health. 2011;11(2):1591. Epub 2011 Mar 15.
In Ontario, Canada, there is a tendency to conflate rural and northern issues and although much of northern Ontario is rural, this is not exclusively the case. In this study, data were utilized from the licensing and regulatory body of physicians in Ontario to provide a more nuanced understanding of the distribution of the physician population across varying degrees of rurality in northern and southern regions.
This is a report on the geographic distribution of the 22 688 GPs, and specialists certified by the College of Family Physicians of Canada and the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada who had their primary practice address in Ontario. Descriptive statistics were produced to determine differences in distribution of physician numbers, age, sex, international medical graduates (IMGs), and certification for physicians with primary practices coded as northern versus southern across varying degrees of rurality.
Differences were found in the Ontario physician population with regard to age, sex and IMG status between rural and urban areas and also from the northern versus southern perspective. There were more younger and male physicians in northern and rural areas. Female physicians were more frequently found in the south with decreasing proportions of females with increasing rurality. In the northern areas of the province, although the proportion of female physicians was lower than in the south, there was a slight increase in the proportion of female physicians as rurality increased. The largest proportions of IMGs were found in urban areas and the proportions of IMGs decreased with increasing rurality. However, northern rural regions did tend to have a higher proportion of IMG physicians than in corresponding rural areas in the south.
The results indicate that although there are similarities in physician demographics in rural and urban areas, there are clear differences between the rural north and the rural south. Likewise, although some patterns distinguish the south from the north, these areas are not homogeneous regions where the urban north is clearly different from the rural north.
在加拿大安大略省,存在将农村和北部问题混为一谈的倾向,尽管安大略省的大部分北部地区是农村地区,但情况并非完全如此。在本研究中,利用了安大略省医师许可和监管机构的数据,以便更细致地了解医师群体在北部和南部不同农村程度地区的分布情况。
本报告是关于在安大略省拥有主要执业地址的22688名家庭医生以及获得加拿大家庭医生学院和加拿大皇家内科医师与外科医师学院认证的专科医生的地理分布情况。进行了描述性统计,以确定在不同农村程度地区,主要执业地点编码为北部和南部的医师在数量、年龄、性别、国际医学毕业生(IMGs)以及认证方面的分布差异。
在安大略省的医师群体中,农村和城市地区之间以及从北部和南部的角度来看,在年龄、性别和IMG身份方面存在差异。北部和农村地区有更多年轻和男性医师。女性医师在南部更为常见,且随着农村程度的增加,女性比例逐渐下降。在该省北部地区,尽管女性医师的比例低于南部,但随着农村程度的增加,女性医师的比例略有上升。IMG比例最高的是城市地区,且随着农村程度的增加,IMG比例下降。然而,北部农村地区的IMG医师比例往往高于南部相应的农村地区。
结果表明,尽管农村和城市地区的医师人口统计学存在相似之处,但北部农村和南部农村之间存在明显差异。同样,尽管有些模式区分了南部和北部,但这些地区并非同质区域,城市北部与农村北部明显不同。