The Fitzhugh Mullan Institute for Health Workforce Equity, Milken Institute School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management, The George Washington University, Washington, District of Columbi, USA.
Health Serv Res. 2020 Dec;55(6):1013-1020. doi: 10.1111/1475-6773.13587.
Independent freestanding emergency departments (IFEDs) have proliferated over the last decade, largely in Texas. We examined the IFED physician workforce composition and changes in emergency physician workforce supply across states and in rural Texas over the period of IFED proliferation following a 2009 legislation allowing the licensing of these sites.
IFED websites, Texas Medical Board lookup tool, National Plan & Provider Enumeration System (NPPES), Provider Enrollment and Chain/Ownership System (PECOS), Medicare Physician Shared Patient Patterns, CareSet DocGraph Hop Teaming, Healthcare Provider Database.
Descriptive analysis of the IFED physician workforce; quasi-experimental difference-in-difference analysis of Texas emergency physician movement into and out of the state; and difference-in-difference-in-difference analysis of the change in emergency physician supply between rural and urban areas in Texas compared with other states.
Using the NPIs obtained through Texas IFED websites and Texas Medical Board data, we examined NPPES/PECOS files, Medicare Physician Shared Patient Patterns, and CareSet DocGraph Hop Teaming for IFED physician practice locations from 2009 to 2017. We extracted all active emergency physicians from a Healthcare Provider Database, derived from a 5% Medicare claims (1999-2017).
In 2019, 545 physicians practiced in Texas IFEDs, of which 515 (94.5%) were emergency physicians. We located 533 in previous practice, of whom 522 (97.9%) previously practiced in Disproportionate Share Hospitals and 100 (18.8%) in rural areas. Following legislation to begin licensing IFEDs in 2009, there were on average 42.1 (P < .01) moving into Texas and 17.0 (P < .01) fewer moving out compared with all other states. Our results also indicated that the difference in emergency physician supply between rural and urban Texas was 1,002 (P < .01) fewer than for other states.
New models of health care organizations such as IFEDs have workforce implications that may further exacerbate rural and underserved workforce and access challenges.
独立的急救部门(IFED)在过去十年中大量涌现,主要集中在德克萨斯州。我们研究了 IFED 医生的劳动力构成,并在允许这些地点获得许可的 2009 年立法之后,在 IFED 扩散期间,在整个州和德克萨斯州农村地区检查了急诊医师劳动力供应的变化。
IFED 网站、德克萨斯州医疗委员会查询工具、国家计划和提供者登记系统(NPPES)、提供者登记和链/所有权系统(PECOS)、医疗保险医师共享患者模式、CareSet DocGraph Hop Teaming、医疗保健提供者数据库。
IFED 医生劳动力的描述性分析;德克萨斯州急诊医生进出该州的准实验差分差异分析;以及与其他州相比,德克萨斯州农村和城市地区急诊医生供应变化的差分差异差异分析。
使用通过德克萨斯州 IFED 网站和德克萨斯州医疗委员会数据获得的 NPIs,我们检查了 NPPES/PECOS 文件、医疗保险医师共享患者模式和 CareSet DocGraph Hop Teaming,以获取 2009 年至 2017 年 IFED 医生的实践地点。我们从 Healthcare Provider Database 中提取了所有活跃的急诊医生,该数据库源自 Medicare 索赔的 5%(1999-2017)。
2019 年,545 名医生在德克萨斯州的 IFED 工作,其中 515 名(94.5%)是急诊医生。我们在以前的实践中找到了 533 个,其中 522 个(97.9%)以前在不成比例的份额医院工作,100 个(18.8%)在农村地区工作。在 2009 年开始许可 IFED 的立法之后,平均有 42.1 名(P<.01)进入德克萨斯州,而与所有其他州相比,有 17.0 名(P<.01)离开。我们的结果还表明,德克萨斯州农村和城市地区之间的急诊医生供应差异为 1002 名(P<.01)。
新的医疗保健组织模式,如 IFED,对劳动力有影响,这可能进一步加剧农村和服务不足地区的劳动力和获得机会的挑战。