Rios-Diaz Arturo J, Metcalfe David, Singh Mansher, Zogg Cheryl K, Olufajo Olubode A, Ramos Margarita S, Caterson Edward J, Talbot Simon G
Boston, Mass.
From the Center for Surgery and Public Health, Division of Plastic Surgery, Department of Surgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital; Harvard Medical School and Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health.
Plast Reconstr Surg. 2016 May;137(5):1516-1522. doi: 10.1097/PRS.0000000000002103.
Unequal access to hospital specialists for emergency care is an issue in the United States. The authors sought to describe the geographic distribution of specialist hand surgeons and associated factors in the United States.
Geographic distributions of surgeons holding a Subspecialty Certificate in Surgery of the Hand and hand surgery fellowship positions were identified from the American Board of Medical Specialties Database and the literature (2013), respectively. State-level population and per capita income were ascertained using U.S. Census data. Variations in hand trauma admissions were determined using Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project national/state inpatient databases. Risk-adjusted generalized linear models were used to assess independent association between hand surgeon density and hand trauma admission density, fellowship position density, and per capita income.
Among 2019 specialist hand surgeons identified, 72.1 percent were orthopedic surgeons, 18.3 percent were plastic surgeons, and 9.6 percent were general surgeons. There were 157 hand surgery fellowship positions nationwide. There were 149,295 annual hand trauma admissions. The national density of specialist hand surgeons and density of trauma admission were 0.6 and 47.6, respectively. The density of specialist hand surgeons varied significantly between states. State-level variations in density of surgeons were independent and significantly associated with median per capita income (p < 0.001) and with density of fellowships (p = 0.014).
Specialist hand surgeons are distributed unevenly across the United States. State-level analyses suggest that states with lower per capita incomes may be particularly underserved, which may contribute to regional disparities in access to emergency hand trauma care.
在美国,获得医院专科医生进行急诊治疗的机会不平等是一个问题。作者试图描述美国专科手外科医生的地理分布及相关因素。
分别从美国医学专业委员会数据库和文献(2013年)中确定持有手外科专科证书的外科医生和手外科 fellowship 职位的地理分布。使用美国人口普查数据确定州级人口和人均收入。使用医疗保健成本和利用项目国家/州住院数据库确定手部创伤入院情况的差异。风险调整后的广义线性模型用于评估手外科医生密度与手部创伤入院密度、fellowship 职位密度和人均收入之间的独立关联。
在确定的2019名专科手外科医生中,72.1% 是骨科医生,18.3% 是整形外科医生,9.6% 是普通外科医生。全国有157个手外科 fellowship 职位。每年有149,295例手部创伤入院。专科手外科医生的全国密度和创伤入院密度分别为0.6和47.6。专科手外科医生的密度在各州之间存在显著差异。外科医生密度的州级差异是独立的,并且与人均收入中位数(p < 0.001)和 fellowship 职位密度(p = 0.014)显著相关。
专科手外科医生在美国的分布不均衡。州级分析表明,人均收入较低的州可能服务尤其不足,这可能导致手部创伤急诊护理的区域差异。