A.B. Parlier was research project coordinator, Center for Research, Mountain Area Health Education Center, Asheville, North Carolina, at the time of writing. As of August 2017, she will be a graduate student, Psychology Department, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia. S.L. Galvin is director of research, Center for Research, Mountain Area Health Education Center, Asheville, North Carolina, and adjunct assistant professor, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, North Carolina. S. Thach is director of clinical and community outreach, Western North Carolina Rural Health Initiative, Mountain Area Health Education Center, Asheville, North Carolina. D. Kruidenier is research and clinical librarian, Center for Research, Mountain Area Health Education Center, Asheville, North Carolina. E.B. Fagan is chief education officer, Mountain Area Health Education Center (MAHEC), assistant program director, Family Medicine Residency Program, MAHEC, and assistant medical director, Department of Family Medicine, MAHEC, Asheville, North Carolina. He is also associate professor, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
Acad Med. 2018 Jan;93(1):130-140. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000001839.
To examine the literature documenting successes in recruiting and retaining rural primary care physicians.
The authors conducted a narrative review of literature on individual, educational, and professional characteristics and experiences that lead to recruitment and retention of rural primary care physicians. In May 2016, they searched MEDLINE, PubMed, CINAHL, ERIC, Web of Science, Google Scholar, the Grey Literature Report, and reference lists of included studies for literature published in or after 1990 in the United States, Canada, or Australia. The authors identified 83 articles meeting inclusion criteria. They synthesized results and developed a theoretical model that proposes how the findings interact and influence rural recruitment and retention.
The authors' proposed theoretical model suggests factors interact across multiple dimensions to facilitate the development of a rural physician identity. Rural upbringing, personal attributes, positive rural exposure, preparation for rural life and medicine, partner receptivity to rural living, financial incentives, integration into rural communities, and good work-life balance influence recruitment and retention. However, attending medical schools and/or residencies with a rural emphasis and participating in rural training may reflect, rather than produce, intention for rural practice.
Many factors enhance rural physician identity development and influence whether physicians enter, remain in, and thrive in rural practice. To help trainees and young physicians develop the professional identity of a rural physician, multifactorial medical training approaches aimed at encouraging long-term rural practice should focus on rural-specific clinical and nonclinical competencies while providing trainees with positive rural experiences.
考察文献中记录的农村初级保健医生招聘和留用成功的情况。
作者对导致农村初级保健医生招聘和留用的个体、教育和职业特征及经历进行了叙述性文献回顾。2016 年 5 月,作者检索了 MEDLINE、PubMed、CINAHL、ERIC、Web of Science、Google Scholar、灰色文献报告以及纳入研究的参考文献,以查找 1990 年或之后在美国、加拿大或澳大利亚发表的文献。作者确定了 83 篇符合纳入标准的文章。他们综合了结果并提出了一个理论模型,提出了这些发现如何相互作用并影响农村地区的招聘和留用。
作者提出的理论模型表明,各种因素在多个维度上相互作用,促进农村医生身份的发展。农村出身、个人特质、积极的农村体验、为农村生活和医学做准备、对农村生活的伴侣接受度、经济激励、融入农村社区以及良好的工作-生活平衡影响招聘和留用。然而,在有农村重点的医学院校就读和/或接受农村培训可能反映而不是产生农村实践的意图。
许多因素增强了农村医生身份的发展,并影响医生是否进入、留在农村并在农村实践中茁壮成长。为了帮助学员和年轻医生发展农村医生的职业身份,旨在鼓励长期农村实践的多因素医学培训方法应侧重于农村特有的临床和非临床能力,同时为学员提供积极的农村体验。