From the Robert Graham Center: Policy Studies in Family Medicine and Primary Care, Washington, DC (AJ, MJR, YJ, SP, AB); Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health General Preventive Medicine Residency, Baltimore, MD (MJR); American Board of Family Medicine, Lexington, KY (AB).
J Am Board Fam Med. 2021 Jan-Feb;34(1):196-207. doi: 10.3122/jabfm.2021.01.200300.
The objective of this study was to identify demographic and practice characteristics associated with family physicians' provision of care to children including a subgroup analysis of those who see pediatric patients younger or older than 5 years of age.
This cross-sectional study used data from US family physicians taking the American Board of Family Medicine continuous certification examination registration questionnaire in 2017 and 2018. The outcome of interest was self-reported care of pediatric patients in practice. We performed bivariate and multivariate logistic regression examining the association between various demographic and practice characteristics with the outcome of interest. We performed subgroup analyses for physicians seeing patients under 5 years old and from 5 to 18 years old.
Among the 11,674 family physicians included in the final analysis, 9744 (83.8%) saw pediatric patients. Physician- and practice-level factors associated with seeing pediatric patients included rural practice, younger age, non-Hispanic White race/ethnicity, independent practice ownership, nonsolo practice, lower pediatrician density, and higher income geographic area. More family physicians saw 5-to-18-year-olds than < 5-year-olds (83.6% vs 68.2%; < .001), and the factors associated with pediatric care were similar among these age subgroups.
A majority of continuous certification US family physicians see pediatric patients in practice; however, rates of pediatric care vary widely based on various demographic and practice characteristics. Efforts to maintain a broad scope of practice for US family physicians will require exploration of the underlying mechanisms driving these practice patterns.
本研究旨在确定与家庭医生为儿童提供医疗服务相关的人口统计学和实践特征,包括对看 5 岁以下和 5-18 岁儿科患者的亚组分析。
本横断面研究使用了 2017 年和 2018 年参加美国家庭医学委员会持续认证考试注册问卷的美国家庭医生的数据。感兴趣的结果是报告在实践中为儿科患者提供的护理。我们进行了二变量和多变量逻辑回归,以检查各种人口统计学和实践特征与感兴趣结果之间的关联。我们对看 5 岁以下和 5-18 岁患者的医生进行了亚组分析。
在最终分析的 11674 名家庭医生中,有 9744 名(83.8%)看儿科患者。与看儿科患者相关的医生和实践因素包括农村实践、年龄较小、非西班牙裔白人种族/民族、独立执业所有权、非单人执业、较低的儿科医生密度和较高的收入地区。看 5-18 岁患者的家庭医生多于看 <5 岁患者(83.6%比 68.2%;<.001),这些年龄亚组中与儿科护理相关的因素相似。
大多数参加持续认证的美国家庭医生在实践中为儿科患者提供服务;然而,基于各种人口统计学和实践特征,儿科护理的比例差异很大。为了维持美国家庭医生广泛的实践范围,需要探索推动这些实践模式的潜在机制。