Falit Benjamin P, Pan Hubert Y, Smith Benjamin D, Alexander Brian M, Zietman Anthony L
Pacific Cancer Institute, Wailuku, Hawaii.
MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas.
Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2016 Nov 1;96(3):501-10. doi: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2016.05.029. Epub 2016 Jun 8.
Examinations of the US radiation oncology workforce offer inconsistent conclusions, but recent data raise significant concerns about an oversupply of physicians. Despite these concerns, residency slots continue to expand at an unprecedented pace. Employed radiation oncologists and professional corporations with weak contracts or loose ties to hospital administrators would be expected to suffer the greatest harm from an oversupply. The reduced cost of labor, however, would be expected to increase profitability for equipment owners, technology vendors, and entrenched professional groups. Policymakers must recognize that the number of practicing radiation oncologists is a poor surrogate for clinical capacity. There is likely to be significant opportunity to augment capacity without increasing the number of radiation oncologists by improving clinic efficiency and offering targeted incentives for geographic redistribution. Payment policy changes significantly threaten radiation oncologists' income, which may encourage physicians to care for greater patient loads, thereby obviating more personnel. Furthermore, the implementation of alternative payment models such as Medicare's Oncology Care Model threatens to decrease both the utilization and price of radiation therapy by turning referring providers into cost-conscious consumers. Medicare funds the vast majority of graduate medical education, but the extent to which the expansion in radiation oncology residency slots has been externally funded is unclear. Excess physician capacity carries a significant risk of harm to society by suboptimally allocating intellectual resources and creating comparative shortages in other, more needed disciplines. There are practical concerns associated with a market-based solution in which medical students self-regulate according to job availability, but antitrust law would likely forbid collaborative self-regulation that purports to restrict supply. Because Congress is unlikely to create one central body to govern residency controls for all specialties, we recommend better reporting of program-specific employment metrics and careful, intellectually honest re-evaluation of existing Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education accreditation standards.
对美国放射肿瘤学劳动力的调查得出了不一致的结论,但近期数据引发了对医生供应过剩的重大担忧。尽管存在这些担忧,但住院医师培训名额仍以前所未有的速度持续增加。预计受雇的放射肿瘤学家以及与医院管理人员签订弱合同或关系松散的专业公司将因供应过剩而遭受最大伤害。然而,劳动力成本的降低预计会提高设备所有者、技术供应商和根深蒂固的专业团体的盈利能力。政策制定者必须认识到,执业放射肿瘤学家的数量并不能很好地代表临床能力。通过提高诊所效率并提供有针对性的地理再分配激励措施,在不增加放射肿瘤学家数量的情况下,很可能有很大机会增加临床能力。支付政策的变化严重威胁到放射肿瘤学家的收入,这可能会促使医生照顾更多的患者,从而避免增加人员。此外,诸如医疗保险的肿瘤护理模式等替代支付模式的实施,有可能通过使转诊提供者成为注重成本的消费者,从而降低放射治疗的利用率和价格。医疗保险为绝大多数研究生医学教育提供资金,但放射肿瘤学住院医师培训名额的扩张在多大程度上得到外部资金支持尚不清楚。医生能力过剩会因智力资源分配不当以及在其他更需要的学科中造成相对短缺而给社会带来重大危害风险。对于基于市场的解决方案存在实际担忧,即医学生根据就业机会进行自我调节,但反垄断法可能会禁止旨在限制供应的协作性自我调节。由于国会不太可能设立一个中央机构来管理所有专业的住院医师培训控制,我们建议更好地报告特定项目的就业指标,并对现有的研究生医学教育认证委员会认证标准进行认真、理性诚实的重新评估。