Faculty of Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Blusson Hall, Room 11300, 8888 University Drive, Burnaby, BC, V5A 1S6, Canada.
British Columbia Academic Health Science Network, Vancouver, Canada.
Hum Resour Health. 2020 Sep 21;18(1):67. doi: 10.1186/s12960-020-00508-5.
There are ongoing accessibility challenges in primary care in British Columbia, Canada, with 17% of the population not having a regular source of care. Anecdotal evidence suggests that physicians are moving away from a community-based comprehensive practice model, which could contribute to shortages. Thus, we aimed to identify and describe how family physicians are currently organizing their primary care practices in a large health region in British Columbia and to examine differences between newer graduates and more established physicians.
Data for this cross-sectional study were drawn from an annual physician privileging survey. N = 1017 physicians were invited to participate. We categorized practice style into five distinct groupings and compared features across respondent groups, including personal and practice location characteristics, hospital and teaching work, payment and appointment characteristics, and scope of practice. We discuss the implications of styles of practice and associated characteristics on health workforce policy and planning.
We received responses from 525 (51.6%) physicians. Of these, 355 (67.6%) reported doing at least some community-based primary care. However, only 112 (21.3%) provided this care full time. Most respondents supplemented community-based work with part-time hours in focused practice, hospitals, or inpatient facilities. We found diversity in the scope and style of practice across practice models. Compared to established physicians, new graduates (in practice less than 10 years) work more weekly hours (more patient care, and paperwork in particular). However, we found no difference between new and established physicians in the odds of providing any or full-time community-based primary care.
Despite a lack of formalized structural reform in British Columbia's primary care system, most physicians are finding alternative ways to model their practice and shifting away from work at single-location, community-based clinics. This shift challenges assumptions that are relied on for workplace planning that is intended to ensure adequate access to longitudinal, community-based family medicine.
加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省的初级保健仍存在诸多实际问题,有 17%的居民没有固定的医疗服务来源。有传闻称,医生正在逐渐摒弃以社区为基础的综合性执业模式,这可能导致医疗资源短缺。因此,我们旨在确定并描述不列颠哥伦比亚省一个大型卫生区域的家庭医生目前是如何组织其初级保健业务的,并研究新毕业医生和经验丰富医生之间的差异。
这项横断面研究的数据来自不列颠哥伦比亚省年度医生特权调查。邀请了 1017 名医生参与调查。我们将执业风格分为五个不同的类别,并比较了不同受访者群体之间的特征,包括个人和执业地点特征、医院和教学工作、薪酬和预约特征以及执业范围。我们讨论了实践风格和相关特征对卫生人力政策和规划的影响。
我们收到了 525 名(51.6%)医生的回复。其中,355 名(67.6%)报告至少提供一些以社区为基础的初级保健。然而,只有 112 名(21.3%)全职提供此类服务。大多数受访者通过兼职在以社区为基础的工作、医院或住院病房中补充社区工作。我们发现,在不同的执业模式下,执业范围和风格存在多样性。与经验丰富的医生相比,新毕业医生(从业不到 10 年)每周工作时间更长(特别是患者护理和文书工作)。然而,我们没有发现新毕业医生和经验丰富医生在提供任何或全职以社区为基础的初级保健的可能性方面存在差异。
尽管不列颠哥伦比亚省的初级保健系统缺乏正式的结构性改革,但大多数医生正在寻找替代方法来调整他们的执业模式,并逐渐从单一地点、以社区为基础的诊所工作模式中转移出来。这种转变挑战了基于确保获得纵向、以社区为基础的家庭医学服务的工作场所规划假设。