Morgan Perri
Perri Morgan is a professor in the Department of Family Medicine and Community Health and a professor in the Department of Population Health Sciences at Duke School of Medicine in Durham, N.C. The author has disclosed no potential conflicts of interest, financial or otherwise.
JAAPA. 2019 Oct;32(10):51-53. doi: 10.1097/01.JAA.0000580580.89002.f4.
Healthcare workforce projections have important policy implications. Provider shortages can shortchange patients, and overproduction of providers imposes costs on society. The most publicized physician supply and demand projections, commissioned annually by the Association of American Medical Colleges, regularly predict dire physician shortages. These projections are based on unrealistically low estimates of the amount of physician work that can be replaced by physician assistants (PAs) and NPs. For example, the projections factor in the contribution of one primary care PA or NP as one-fourth that of a physician. If workforce projections used evidence-based productivity estimates, the predicted physician shortfalls would be much smaller and perhaps even disappear.
医疗劳动力预测具有重要的政策意义。医疗服务提供者短缺会亏待患者,而提供者过剩则会给社会带来成本。美国医学院协会每年委托进行的最广为人知的医生供需预测经常预测医生严重短缺。这些预测基于对医师助理(PAs)和执业护士(NPs)可替代的医师工作量的不切实际的低估计。例如,这些预测将一名初级保健医师助理或执业护士的贡献视为医师的四分之一。如果劳动力预测采用基于证据的生产率估计,那么预测的医生短缺情况将小得多,甚至可能消失。