National Centre of Rural Medicine, University of Tromsø, Tromsø, Norway.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2012 Mar 20;12:68. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-12-68.
The use of increasingly complex payment schemes in primary care may represent a barrier to recruiting general practitioners (GP). The existing Norwegian remuneration system is fully activity based - 2/3 fee-for-service and 1/3 capitation. Given that the system has been designed and revised in close collaborations with the medical association, it is likely to correspond - at least to some degree - with the preferences of current GPs (men in majority). The objective of this paper was to study which preferences that young doctors (women in majority), who are the potential entrants to general practice have for activity based vs. salary based payment systems.
In November-December 2010 all last year medical students and all interns in Norway (n = 1.562) were invited to participate in an online survey. The respondents were asked their opinion on systems of remuneration for GPs; inclination to work as a GP; risk attitude; income preferences; work pace tolerance. The data was analysed using one-way ANOVA and multinomial logistic regression analysis.
A total of 831 (53%) responded. Nearly half the sample (47%) did not consider the remuneration system to be important for their inclination to work as GP; 36% considered the current system to make general practice more attractive, while 17% considered it to make general practice less attractive. Those who are attracted by the existing system were men and those who think high income is important, while those who are deterred by the system are risk averse and less happy with a high work pace. On the question of preferred remuneration system, half the sample preferred a mix of salary and activity based remuneration (the median respondent would prefer a 50/50 mix). Only 20% preferred a fully activity based system like the existing one. A salary system was preferred by women, and those less concerned with high income, while a fully activity based system was preferred by men, and those happy with a high work pace.
Given a concern about low recruitment to general practice in Norway, and the fact that an increasing share of medical students is women, we were interested in the extent to which the current Norwegian remuneration system correspond with the preferences of potential GPs. This study suggests that an existing remuneration mechanism has a selection effect on who would like to become a GP. Those most attracted are income motivated men. Those deterred are risk averse, and less happy with a high work pace. More research is needed on the extent to which experienced GPs differ along the questions we asked potential GPs, as well as studying the relative importance of other attributes than payment schemes.
初级保健中日益复杂的支付方案的使用可能成为招聘全科医生(GP)的障碍。现有的挪威薪酬制度完全基于活动——2/3 的按服务收费和 1/3 的人头费。鉴于该系统是在与医疗协会的密切合作下设计和修订的,因此它可能至少在一定程度上符合当前全科医生(以男性为主)的偏好。本文的目的是研究年轻医生(以女性为主)对基于活动和基于薪资的支付系统的偏好,这些年轻医生是全科医生的潜在进入者。
2010 年 11 月至 12 月,挪威所有去年的医学生和所有实习医生(n=1562)受邀参加在线调查。受访者被问及他们对 GP 薪酬制度的看法;作为 GP 工作的倾向;风险态度;收入偏好;工作节奏容忍度。使用单因素方差分析和多项逻辑回归分析对数据进行分析。
共有 831 人(53%)做出回应。样本中近一半(47%)的人认为薪酬制度对他们作为 GP 工作的倾向不重要;36%的人认为现行制度使全科医学更具吸引力,而 17%的人认为它使全科医学更缺乏吸引力。那些被现有系统吸引的人是男性,那些认为高收入很重要的人,而那些被系统吓倒的人是规避风险的,并且对高工作节奏不满意。在薪酬制度偏好的问题上,有一半的受访者更喜欢工资和基于活动的薪酬相结合(中位数受访者更倾向于 50/50 的组合)。只有 20%的人更喜欢像现有的完全基于活动的系统。女性和不太关注高收入的人更喜欢工资制度,而男性和对高工作节奏满意的人更喜欢完全基于活动的系统。
鉴于挪威对全科医生招聘人数不足的担忧,以及越来越多的医学生是女性的事实,我们对现行的挪威薪酬制度与潜在全科医生的偏好程度感兴趣。这项研究表明,现有的薪酬机制对谁愿意成为全科医生具有选择效应。最吸引人的是收入动机的男性。那些被吓倒的人是规避风险的,对高工作节奏不满意。需要进一步研究经验丰富的全科医生在我们向潜在全科医生提出的问题上的差异程度,以及研究支付方案以外的其他属性的相对重要性。