Department of Surgery, Keck School of Medicine of USC, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California.
Department of Surgery, Keck School of Medicine of USC, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California; Department of Population and Public Health Sciences, Keck School of Medicine of USC, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California.
Ann Thorac Surg. 2022 Jun;113(6):2085-2091. doi: 10.1016/j.athoracsur.2021.07.078. Epub 2021 Aug 26.
The objective of this study was to identify trainee knowledge gaps in reimbursement and compensation, determine the perceived importance of understanding these topics, and to explore if the Thoracic Surgery Curriculum needs additional educational material.
The Thoracic Surgical Residents Association Executive Committee selected the research proposal and distributed an anonymous electronic survey to 531 Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education cardiothoracic surgery trainees. Standard descriptive statistics and regression analyses were performed.
One hundred fourteen responses were collected (response rate, 21.5%). Most trainees understood little to none about how attending surgeons are reimbursed (n = 74, 69%). Most trainees reported knowing little or nothing about pay-for-performance compensation (n = 73, 67%), bundled care (n = 82, 75%), or value-based reimbursement (n = 84, 77%). Approximately 20% of trainees were accurate in estimating surgeon reimbursement for 3 common cardiothoracic surgery procedures to within 20% of the true reimbursement value, whereas approximately 30% were accurate to within 50% of the true reimbursement value. No respondent characteristics were found to be associated with a more or less accurate reimbursement response. Additionally 81% of trainees (n = 87) responded that by the conclusion of training, understanding surgeon reimbursement is very important or extremely important and 90% of trainees (n = 95) either somewhat agreed or strongly agreed with including these topics in the Thoracic Surgical Curriculum.
Despite acknowledging the importance of understanding physician compensation and reimbursement, cardiothoracic surgery trainees do not understand how the current models work. This study exemplifies the need for a succinct curriculum in this domain for trainees nationwide.
本研究旨在确定受训者在报销和补偿方面的知识差距,确定理解这些主题的重要性,并探讨胸外科课程是否需要额外的教育材料。
胸外科住院医师协会执行委员会选择了研究提案,并向 531 名美国毕业后医学教育认证委员会心胸外科住院医师发放了匿名电子调查。进行了标准描述性统计和回归分析。
共收集到 114 份回复(回复率为 21.5%)。大多数受训者对主治外科医生的报销方式知之甚少(n=74,69%)。大多数受训者表示对绩效薪酬补偿(n=73,67%)、捆绑式护理(n=82,75%)或基于价值的报销(n=84,77%)了解甚少或一无所知。大约 20%的受训者能够准确估计 3 种常见的心胸外科手术的外科医生报销金额,误差在真实报销金额的 20%以内,而大约 30%的误差在真实报销金额的 50%以内。没有发现受训者特征与报销回答的准确性有任何关联。此外,81%的受训者(n=87)表示,到培训结束时,理解外科医生的报销非常重要或极其重要,90%的受训者(n=95)表示或多或少同意或强烈同意在胸外科课程中包含这些主题。
尽管受训者承认理解医生薪酬和报销的重要性,但他们并不了解当前模式的运作方式。本研究例证了全国范围内对该领域简明课程的需求。