Tippie College of Business, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, United States of America.
Office of Statewide Clinical Education Programs, Carver College of Medicine, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Oct 8;13(10):e0204813. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0204813. eCollection 2018.
Physician assistants are expected to have an important role in providing both primary and specialty care. Iowa has a large rural (and aging) population and faces challenges to provide equitable access to care. This study examined changes in the Iowa physician assistant workforce (1995-2015) focusing on practice setting (primary v. subspecialty care) and geographic location (rural/urban, Health Professional Shortage Area). Documenting their current locations and service in HPSAs for primary care will help health planners track future changes.
Data from 1995-2015 from the Iowa Health Professions Inventory (Office of Statewide Clinical Education Programs, Carver College of Medicine, University of Iowa) were combined with US census data on rural location and HPSA status. SPSS was used to compare Iowa and national data. Growth trends were analyzed using joinpoint regression.
The overall Iowa physician assistant workforce increased 161% between 1995 and 2015. In 2015, more than two-thirds (71%) were female and more than 30% practiced in rural counties. The average annual growth rate of primary care PAs (per 100,000 population) was significantly higher in the periods from 1995-1997 and 1997-2001 (22.4% and 7.4% respectively) than in period from 2001-2015 (3.8%). By 2015, 56% of Iowa's physician assistants practiced in primary care (versus 29.6% nationally). Of these, 44% of primary care physician assistants in Iowa practiced in counties, geographic locations or worksites designated as Health Professional Shortage Areas for primary care.
A high proportion of Iowa's physician assistant workforce practiced in primary care and many served patients in Health Professional Shortage Areas. The number of physician assistants in Iowa will continue to grow and serve an important role in providing access to health care, particularly to rural Iowans.
医师助理有望在提供初级和专科医疗服务方面发挥重要作用。爱荷华州拥有庞大的农村(和老龄化)人口,在提供公平获得医疗服务方面面临挑战。本研究考察了爱荷华州医师助理劳动力(1995-2015 年)的变化,重点关注执业地点(初级保健与专科保健)和地理位置(农村/城市、卫生专业人员短缺地区)。记录他们在初级保健 HPSA 的当前位置和服务将帮助卫生规划者跟踪未来的变化。
1995-2015 年的数据来自爱荷华州卫生专业人员库存(全州临床教育计划办公室,卡尔弗医学院,爱荷华大学),并与美国农村地区和 HPSA 地位的人口普查数据相结合。使用 SPSS 比较爱荷华州和全国数据。使用 Joinpoint 回归分析增长趋势。
1995 年至 2015 年间,爱荷华州整体医师助理劳动力增加了 161%。2015 年,超过三分之二(71%)为女性,超过 30%在农村县执业。初级保健医师助理的年平均增长率(每 10 万人)在 1995-1997 年和 1997-2001 年期间分别显著更高(分别为 22.4%和 7.4%),而在 2001-2015 年期间则较低(3.8%)。到 2015 年,爱荷华州 56%的医师助理从事初级保健工作(全国为 29.6%)。其中,爱荷华州 44%的初级保健医师助理在被指定为初级保健卫生专业人员短缺地区的县、地理位置或工作场所执业。
爱荷华州医师助理劳动力的很大一部分从事初级保健工作,许多人在卫生专业人员短缺地区为患者服务。爱荷华州的医师助理人数将继续增加,并在提供医疗服务方面发挥重要作用,特别是为农村爱荷华州人提供服务。