Department of General Practice and Health Services Research, University Hospital Heidelberg, Germany.
BMC Fam Pract. 2011 Oct 11;12:112. doi: 10.1186/1471-2296-12-112.
Many western countries are facing an existing or imminent shortage of primary care physicians especially in rural areas. In Germany, working in rural areas is often thought to be associated with more working hours, a higher number of patients and a lower income than working in urban areas. These perceptions might be key reasons for the shortage. The aim of this analysis was to explore if working time, number of treated patients per week or proportion of privately insured patients vary between rural and urban areas in Germany using two different definitions of rurality within a sample of primary care physicians including general practitioners, general internists and paediatricians.
This is a secondary analysis of pre-collected data raised by a questionnaire that was sent to a representative random sample of 1500 primary care physicians chosen by data of the National Association of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians from all federal states in Germany. We employed two different methods of defining rurality; firstly, level of rurality as rated by physicians themselves (urban area, small town, rural area); secondly, rurality defined according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
This analysis was based upon questionnaire data from 715 physicians. Primary care physicians in single-handed practices in rural areas worked on average four hours more per week than their urban counterparts (p < 0.05). Physicians' gender, the number of patients treated per week and the type of practice (single/group handed) were significantly related to the number of working hours. Neither the proportion of privately insured patients nor the number of patients seen per week differed significantly between rural and urban areas when applying the self-rated classification of rurality.
Overall this analysis identified few differences between urban and rural primary care physician working conditions. To counter future misdistribution of primary care, students should receive practical experience in rural areas to get more practical knowledge on working conditions.
许多西方国家都面临着初级保健医生的现有或即将出现的短缺,尤其是在农村地区。在德国,人们普遍认为在农村地区工作的工作时间更长,治疗的患者人数更多,收入低于城市地区。这些看法可能是短缺的关键原因。本分析的目的是探讨在德国,使用两种不同的农村定义,在包括全科医生、普通内科医生和儿科医生在内的初级保健医生样本中,工作时间、每周治疗的患者人数或私人保险患者的比例是否因城乡差异而有所不同。
这是对从德国所有联邦州的国家法定健康保险医师协会数据中选择的 1500 名初级保健医生的代表性随机样本进行的问卷调查中预先收集的数据进行的二次分析。我们采用了两种不同的农村定义方法;首先,医生自己评定的农村水平(城市地区、小镇、农村地区);其次,根据经济合作与发展组织定义的农村地区。
本分析基于 715 名医生的问卷调查数据。农村单人执业的初级保健医生每周的工作时间平均比城市同行多 4 小时(p < 0.05)。医生的性别、每周治疗的患者人数和执业类型(单人执业/团队执业)与工作时间显著相关。当应用农村地区的自我评定分类时,农村和城市地区的私人保险患者比例或每周就诊患者人数没有显著差异。
总体而言,本分析发现城乡初级保健医生工作条件之间的差异很小。为了防止未来初级保健的分配不当,应该让学生在农村地区获得实践经验,以获得更多关于工作条件的实际知识。