Eighan James, Walsh Brendan, Smith Samantha, Wren Maev-Ann, Barron Steve, Morgenroth Edgar
Economic and Social Research Institute, Whittaker Square, Sir John Rogerson's Quay, Dublin 2, Dublin, Ireland.
University College, formerly ESRI (until December 2015), Dublin, Ireland.
Ir J Med Sci. 2019 Feb;188(1):19-27. doi: 10.1007/s11845-018-1806-1. Epub 2018 Apr 13.
The lack of information on public and private physiotherapy supply in Ireland makes current and future resource allocation decisions difficult.
This paper estimates the supply of physiotherapists in Ireland and profiles physiotherapists across acute and non-acute sectors, and across public and private practice. It examines geographic variation in physiotherapist supply, examining the implications of controlling for healthcare need.
Physiotherapist headcounts are estimated using Health Service Personnel Census (HSPC) and Irish Society of Chartered Physiotherapists (ISCP) Register data. Headcounts are converted to whole-time equivalents (WTEs) using the HSPC and a survey of ISCP members to account for full- and part-time working practices. Non-acute supply per 10,000 population in each county is estimated to examine geographic inequalities and the raw population is adjusted in turn for a range of need indicators.
An estimated 3172 physiotherapists were practising in Ireland in 2015; 6.8 physiotherapists per 10,000, providing an estimated 2620 WTEs. Females accounted for 74% of supply. Supply was greater in the non-acute sector; 1774 WTEs versus 846 WTEs in the acute sector. Physiotherapists in the acute sector were located mainly in publicly financed institutions (89%) with an even public/private split observed in the non-acute sector. Non-acute physiotherapist supply is unequally distributed across Ireland (Gini coefficient = 0.12; 95% CI 0.08-0.15), and inequalities remain after controlling for variations in healthcare needs across counties.
The supply of physiotherapists in Ireland is 30% lower than the EU-28 average. Substantial inequality in the distribution of physiotherapists across counties is observed.
爱尔兰缺乏有关公共和私人物理治疗服务供应的信息,这使得当前和未来的资源分配决策变得困难。
本文估计了爱尔兰物理治疗师的供应量,并描述了急性和非急性部门以及公共和私人执业中的物理治疗师概况。它研究了物理治疗师供应的地理差异,并探讨了控制医疗需求的影响。
使用卫生服务人员普查(HSPC)和爱尔兰特许物理治疗师协会(ISCP)登记数据估计物理治疗师人数。使用HSPC和对ISCP成员的一项调查将人数转换为全职等效人数(WTE),以考虑全职和兼职工作模式。估计每个县每10000人口的非急性供应量,以检查地理不平等情况,并依次针对一系列需求指标对原始人口进行调整。
2015年估计有3172名物理治疗师在爱尔兰执业;每10000人中有6.8名物理治疗师,提供了约2620个WTE。女性占供应量的74%。非急性部门的供应量更大;急性部门为846个WTE,非急性部门为1774个WTE。急性部门的物理治疗师主要分布在公共资助机构(89%),非急性部门的公共/私人分布较为平均。爱尔兰各地非急性物理治疗师的供应分布不均(基尼系数=0.12;95%置信区间0.08 - 0.15),在控制各县医疗需求差异后,不平等现象仍然存在。
爱尔兰物理治疗师的供应量比欧盟28国平均水平低30%。各县物理治疗师的分布存在严重不平等。