Lindsay Hedden (
Morris L. Barer is a professor in the Centre for Health Services and Policy Research, School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia.
Health Aff (Millwood). 2017 Nov;36(11):1904-1911. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2017.0014.
Reports of a primary care shortage are ubiquitous in Canada and the United States. We used a population-based, retrospective cohort study to examine the extent to which the feminization and aging of the primary care physician workforce and secular trends may contribute to changes in the availability of primary care services. We used billing data for all primary care physicians in British Columbia for the period 2005-12. We used multivariate linear mixed-effects models to study physician remuneration and activity levels. We found limited change in per physician remuneration over the study period. However, numbers of patient contacts and practice sizes (numbers of unique patients) declined by 14 percent and 10 percent, respectively. Although the feminization of the workforce-and, to a lesser extent, its aging-contributed to this decline, the primary driver appears to be a broad trend toward reduced clinical activity over time. To the extent that similar trends are occurring in the United States, the implications of our study for the availability of primary care services beyond Canada are potentially significant.
在加拿大和美国,普遍存在初级保健短缺的报告。我们使用基于人群的回顾性队列研究,研究初级保健医生队伍的女性化和老龄化以及长期趋势在多大程度上可能导致初级保健服务的可及性发生变化。我们使用了不列颠哥伦比亚省所有初级保健医生在 2005 年至 2012 年期间的计费数据。我们使用多元线性混合效应模型研究医生的薪酬和活动水平。我们发现,在研究期间,每位医生的薪酬变化有限。然而,患者就诊次数和执业规模(独特患者数量)分别下降了 14%和 10%。尽管劳动力的女性化——以及在较小程度上的老龄化——促成了这种下降,但主要驱动因素似乎是随着时间的推移临床活动减少的广泛趋势。如果类似的趋势也在美国发生,那么我们的研究对加拿大以外的初级保健服务的可及性的影响可能是重大的。