Department of Preventive Medicine and Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, Fukuoka University, Fukuoka, Japan.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2011 Oct 8;11:260. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-11-260.
The relative shortage of physicians in Japan's rural areas is an important issue in health policy. In the 1970s, the Japanese government began a policy to increase the number of medical students and to achieve a better distribution of physicians. Beginning in 1985, however, admissions to medical school were reduced to prevent a future oversupply of physicians. In 2007, medical school entrants equaled just 92% of their 1982 peers. The urban annual population growth rate is positive and the rural is negative, a trend that may affect denominator populations and physician distribution.
Our data cover six time points and span a decade: 1998, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2006, and 2008. The spatial units for analysis are the secondary tier of medical care (STM) as defined by the Medical Service Law and related legislation. We examined trends in the geographic disparities in population and physician distribution among 348 STMs in Japan. We compared populations and the number of physicians per 100,000 populations in each STM. To measure maldistribution quantitatively, we calculated Gini coefficients for physician distribution.
Between 1998 and 2008, the total population and the number of practicing physicians for every 100,000 people increased by 0.95% and 13.6%, respectively. However, the inequality of physician distribution remained constant, although small and mostly rural areas experienced an increase in physician to population ratios. In contrast, as the maldistribution of population escalated during the same period, the Gini coefficient of population rose. Although the absolute number of practicing physicians in small STMs decreased, the fall in the denominator population of the STMs resulted in an increase in the number of practicing physicians per population in those located in rural areas.
A policy that increased the number of physicians and the physician to population ratios between 1998 and 2008 in all geographic areas of Japan, irrespective of size, did not lead to a more equal geographical distribution of physicians. The ratios of physicians to population in small rural STMs increased because of concurrent trends in urbanization and not because of a rise in the number of practicing physicians.
日本农村地区医生相对短缺是卫生政策的一个重要问题。20 世纪 70 年代,日本政府开始实施一项增加医学生数量并改善医生分布的政策。然而,自 1985 年以来,入学人数减少以防止未来医生过剩。2007 年,医学院入学人数仅为 1982 年的 92%。城市人口年增长率为正,农村人口增长率为负,这种趋势可能会影响分母人口和医生分布。
我们的数据涵盖了六个时间点,跨越十年:1998 年、2000 年、2002 年、2004 年、2006 年和 2008 年。分析的空间单位是《医疗服务法》和相关立法所定义的二级医疗保健(STM)。我们研究了日本 348 个 STM 之间人口和医生分布的地域差异趋势。我们比较了每个 STM 的人口和每 10 万人中的医生人数。为了定量衡量分布不均,我们计算了医生分布的基尼系数。
1998 年至 2008 年间,总人口和每 10 万人中的执业医师人数分别增长了 0.95%和 13.6%。然而,医生分布的不平等仍然不变,尽管小地区和农村地区的医生与人口比例有所增加。相比之下,随着同期人口分布不均的加剧,人口基尼系数上升。尽管小 STM 中的执业医师人数减少,但 STM 人口的分母减少导致了农村地区每人口执业医师人数的增加。
1998 年至 2008 年间,在日本所有地理区域(无论大小)增加医生数量和医生与人口比例的政策并没有导致医生的地理分布更加平等。由于城市化的同时趋势,而不是执业医师人数的增加,小农村 STM 中的医生与人口比例增加了。