O'Sullivan Belinda G, Joyce Catherine M, McGrail Matthew R
School of Rural Health, Office of Research, Monash University, Level 3, 26 Mercy St, PO Box 666, Bendigo, Victoria 3550, Australia.
Hum Resour Health. 2014 Sep 4;12:50. doi: 10.1186/1478-4491-12-50.
Outreach has been endorsed as an important global strategy to promote universal access to health care but it depends on health workers who are willing to travel. In Australia, rural outreach is commonly provided by specialist doctors who periodically visit the same community over time. However information about the level of participation and the distribution of these services nationally is limited. This paper outlines the proportion of Australian specialist doctors who participate in rural outreach, describes their characteristics and assesses how these characteristics influence remote outreach provision.
We used data from the Medicine in Australia: Balancing Employment and Life (MABEL) survey, collected between June and November 2008. Weighted logistic regression analyses examined the effect of covariates: sex, age, specialist residential location, rural background, practice arrangements and specialist group on rural outreach. A separate logistic regression analysis studied the effect of covariates on remote outreach compared with other rural outreach.
Of 4,596 specialist doctors, 19% (n = 909) provided outreach; of which, 16% (n = 149) provided remote outreach. Most (75%) outreach providers were metropolitan specialists. In multivariate analysis, outreach was associated with being male (OR 1.38, 1.12 to 1.69), having a rural residence (both inner regional: OR 2.07, 1.68 to 2.54; and outer regional/remote: OR 3.40, 2.38 to 4.87) and working in private consulting rooms (OR 1.24, 1.01 to 1.53). Remote outreach was associated with increasing 5-year age (OR1.17, 1.05 to 1.31) and residing in an outer regional/remote location (OR 10.84, 5.82 to 20.19). Specialists based in inner regional areas were less likely than metropolitan-based specialists to provide remote outreach (OR 0.35, 0.17 to 0.70).
There is a healthy level of interest in rural outreach work, but remote outreach is less common. Whilst most providers are metropolitan-based, rural doctors are more likely to provide outreach services. Remote distribution is influenced differently: inner regional specialists are less likely to provide remote services compared with metropolitan specialists. To benefit from outreach services and ensure adequate remote distribution, we need to promote coordinated delivery of services arising from metropolitan and rural locations according to rural and remote health need.
外展服务已被认可为促进全民医疗保健覆盖的一项重要全球战略,但它依赖于愿意出诊的卫生工作者。在澳大利亚,农村外展服务通常由专科医生定期前往同一社区提供。然而,关于全国范围内这些服务的参与程度和分布情况的信息有限。本文概述了参与农村外展服务的澳大利亚专科医生的比例,描述了他们的特征,并评估这些特征如何影响偏远地区的外展服务提供。
我们使用了2008年6月至11月期间收集的澳大利亚医学:平衡就业与生活(MABEL)调查的数据。加权逻辑回归分析研究了协变量(性别、年龄、专科医生居住地点、农村背景、执业安排和专科类别)对农村外展服务的影响。一项单独的逻辑回归分析研究了协变量对偏远地区外展服务与其他农村外展服务相比的影响。
在4596名专科医生中,19%(n = 909)提供外展服务;其中,16%(n = 149)提供偏远地区外展服务。大多数(75%)外展服务提供者是大城市的专科医生。在多变量分析中,外展服务与男性(比值比1.38,1.12至1.69)、居住在农村地区(内部地区:比值比2.07,1.68至2.54;外部地区/偏远地区:比值比3.40,2.38至4.87)以及在私人诊室工作(比值比1.24,1.01至1.53)有关。偏远地区外展服务与年龄每增加5岁(比值比1.17,1.05至1.31)以及居住在外部地区/偏远地区(比值比10.84,5.82至20.19)有关。与大城市的专科医生相比,内部地区的专科医生提供偏远地区外展服务的可能性较小(比值比0.35,0.17至0.70)。
对农村外展工作有较高的兴趣水平,但偏远地区外展服务较少见。虽然大多数服务提供者是大城市的专科医生,但农村医生更有可能提供外展服务。偏远地区的分布受到不同影响:与大城市的专科医生相比,内部地区的专科医生提供偏远地区服务的可能性较小。为了从外展服务中受益并确保偏远地区有足够服务分布,我们需要根据农村和偏远地区的健康需求,促进大城市和农村地区协调提供服务。