Chen Rossan Melissa, Petterson Stephen, Bazemore Andrew, Grumbach Kevin
R.M. Chen is associate physician, Family Medicine, Kaiser Permanente Napa Solano, Vallejo, California. She is a graduate of the University of California, San Francisco Family and Community Medicine residency program. S. Petterson is research director, Robert Graham Center: Policy Studies in Family Medicine and Primary Care, Washington, DC. A. Bazemore is director, Robert Graham Center: Policy Studies in Family Medicine and Primary Care, Washington, DC. K. Grumbach is professor and chair, Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
Acad Med. 2015 Sep;90(9):1278-83. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000000805.
To examine the perceived likelihood of sustaining new residency positions funded by five-year (2010-2015) Primary Care Residency Expansion (PCRE) grants from the Health Resources and Services Administration, which aimed to increase training output to address primary care workforce issues.
During September-December 2013, the authors administered an online or telephone survey to program directors whose residency programs received PCRE grants. The main outcome measure was perceived likelihood of sustaining the expanded residency positions beyond the expiration of the grant, in the outlying years of 2016 and 2017 (when the positions will be partially supported) and after 2017 (when the positions will be unsupported).
Of 78 eligible program directors, 62 responded (response rate = 79.5%). Twenty-eight (45.1%; 95% CI 32.9%-57.9%) reported that their programs were unlikely to, very unlikely to, or not planning to continue the expanded positions after the PCRE grant expires. Overall, 14 (22.5%) reported having secured full funding to support the expanded positions beyond 2017. Family medicine and pediatrics program directors were significantly less likely than internal medicine program directors to report having secured funding for the outlying years (P = .02).
This study suggests that an approach to primary care residency training expansion that relies on time-limited grants is unlikely to produce sustainable growth of the primary care pipeline. Policy makers should instead implement systemic reform of graduate medical education (GME) financing and designate reliable sources of funding, such as Medicare and Medicaid GME funds, for new primary care residency positions.
研究由卫生资源与服务管理局提供的为期五年(2010 - 2015年)的初级保健住院医师培训扩展(PCRE)拨款资助的新住院医师职位得以维持的可感知可能性,该拨款旨在增加培训产出以解决初级保健劳动力问题。
2013年9月至12月期间,作者对其住院医师培训项目获得PCRE拨款的项目主任进行了在线或电话调查。主要结果指标是在拨款到期后的偏远年份(2016年和2017年,届时职位将获得部分支持)以及2017年之后(届时职位将无资金支持)维持扩展后的住院医师职位的可感知可能性。
在78名符合条件的项目主任中,62人做出了回应(回应率 = 79.5%)。28人(45.1%;95%置信区间32.9% - 57.9%)报告称,他们的项目在PCRE拨款到期后不太可能、极不可能或不打算继续维持扩展后的职位。总体而言,14人(22.5%)报告称已获得全额资金以支持2017年之后的扩展职位。家庭医学和儿科学项目主任报告称在偏远年份获得资金的可能性显著低于内科学项目主任(P = 0.02)。
本研究表明,依赖限时拨款的初级保健住院医师培训扩展方法不太可能实现初级保健人才培养的可持续增长。政策制定者应转而实施研究生医学教育(GME)融资的系统性改革,并为新的初级保健住院医师职位指定可靠的资金来源,如医疗保险和医疗补助GME资金。