Department of Public Health, School of Health Sciences, Ashkelon Academic College, Ashkelon, Israel.
Department of Health Systems Management, Faculty of Health Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva, Israel.
Isr J Health Policy Res. 2019 Nov 1;8(1):78. doi: 10.1186/s13584-019-0346-0.
The rate of Israeli paramedics leaving the profession has been increasing in recent years: 50% leave the profession in three years, for the most part before retirement. While approximately 2500 paramedics have been trained, only about a third of them are still active. The number of paramedics per 100,000 in Israel is only 8, compared to around 66 in the US, and in light of the shortage of paramedics it is important to enhance retention rates. The purpose of the study was to examine the factors related to paramedics leaving the profession in Israel.
Out of 1000 emails sent, 533 Paramedics responded, of which 200 paramedics who left the profession responded (73% left five years after completing training and 93% after 10 years). Among these former paramedics, choosing the paramedic profession was based mainly on an idealistic sense of mission and eagerness to help others, yet leaving the paramedic profession was related to extrinsic factors: lack of career options, extensive and strenuous physical demands accompanied by unrewarding salaries, unusually long work hours, and shift work that negatively affected family and personal life.
It seems that work conditions, including the lack of opportunities for promotion, lack of professional prospects, and inappropriate compensation for hard work are crucial factors in the decision to leave.
A joint committee of the Ministries of Health, Justice, and Finance and MDA (Magen David Adom, the national EMS in Israel) should be established for the purpose of improving the conditions and modalities of employment of paramedics and providing appropriate emotional support for paramedics who are exposed daily to work under extreme conditions of stress and human suffering. A joint effort could greatly reduce rates of leaving, training costs, and costs incidental to turnover, as well as increase job satisfaction. Moreover, regulating the profession and expanding the scope of practice to new fields like community paramedicine as part of the EMS service and expanding the scope of physician assistants as an academic profession can create opportunities for advancement and diversity at work that will help retain paramedics in the profession.
近年来,以色列护理人员离开行业的比例一直在上升:其中 50%的人在三年内离职,大多数人在退休前离职。虽然已经培训了大约 2500 名护理人员,但其中只有约三分之一的人仍在活跃。以色列每 10 万人中只有 8 名护理人员,而美国约有 66 名,鉴于护理人员短缺,提高保留率很重要。本研究的目的是检查与以色列护理人员离职相关的因素。
在发出的 1000 封电子邮件中,有 533 名护理人员做出了回应,其中 200 名已经离职的护理人员做出了回应(73%的人在完成培训五年后离职,93%的人在培训十年后离职)。在这些前护理人员中,选择护理职业主要基于理想主义的使命感和渴望帮助他人,但离开护理职业与外在因素有关:缺乏职业选择、广泛而艰苦的体力需求伴随着回报不高的工资、异常长的工作时间和轮班工作,这些都对家庭和个人生活产生了负面影响。
似乎工作条件,包括缺乏晋升机会、缺乏职业前景以及对辛勤工作的薪酬补偿不当,是决定离职的关键因素。
卫生、司法和财政部以及 MDA(以色列国家急救组织)的联合委员会应成立,目的是改善护理人员的工作条件和就业方式,并为每天在极端压力和人类痛苦下工作的护理人员提供适当的情感支持。共同努力可以大大降低离职率、培训成本以及人员更替带来的附带成本,并提高工作满意度。此外,规范该职业并将实践范围扩大到社区急救等新领域,作为紧急医疗服务的一部分,并扩大医师助理的范围作为学术职业,可以为护理人员在该职业中提供晋升和工作多样性的机会。