Department of Family Medicine, Michigan State University College of Human Medicine, East Lansing, MI.
Department of Family and Community Medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin - Central Wisconsin, Wausau, WI.
Fam Med. 2022 Jul;54(7):542-554. doi: 10.22454/FamMed.2022.440132.
The United States, like many other nations, faces a chronic shortage of primary care physicians. The purpose of this scoping review was to synthesize literature describing evidence-based institutional practices and interventions that support medical students' choices of primary care specialties, published in the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.
We surveyed peer-reviewed, published research. An experienced medical librarian conducted searches of multiple databases. Articles were selected for inclusion based on explicit criteria. We charted articles by topic, methodology, year of publication, journal, country of origin, and presence or absence of funding. We then scored included articles for quality. Finally, we defined and described six common stages of development of institutional interventions.
We reviewed 8,083 articles and identified 199 articles meeting inclusion criteria and 41 related articles. As a group, studies were of low quality, but improved over time. Most were quantitative studies conducted in the United States. Many studies utilized one of four common methodologic approaches: retrospective surveys, studies of programs or curricula, large-scale multi-institution comparisons, and single-institution exemplars. Most studies developed groundwork or examined effectiveness or impact, with few studies of planning or piloting. Few studies examined state or regional workforce outcomes.
Research examining medical school interventions and institutional practices to support primary care specialty choice would benefit from stronger theoretical grounding, greater investment in planning and piloting, consistent use of language, more qualitative methods, and innovative approaches. Robust funding mechanisms are needed to advance these goals.
与许多其他国家一样,美国也面临着初级保健医生长期短缺的问题。本范围综述的目的是综合描述支持医学生选择初级保健专业的基于证据的机构实践和干预措施的文献,这些文献发表于美国、加拿大、澳大利亚和新西兰。
我们调查了同行评议的已发表研究。一位经验丰富的医学图书馆员对多个数据库进行了搜索。根据明确的标准选择纳入的文章。我们按主题、方法、发表年份、期刊、来源国以及是否有资金进行分类。然后,我们对纳入的文章进行了质量评分。最后,我们定义并描述了机构干预措施发展的六个常见阶段。
我们审查了 8083 篇文章,确定了符合纳入标准的 199 篇文章和 41 篇相关文章。总的来说,这些研究的质量较低,但随着时间的推移有所提高。大多数是在美国进行的定量研究。许多研究采用了四种常见方法学方法之一:回顾性调查、项目或课程研究、大规模多机构比较和单一机构范例。大多数研究都是为基础工作或检验效果或影响而进行的,很少有关于规划或试点的研究。很少有研究考察州或地区的劳动力成果。
研究医学学校干预措施和支持初级保健专业选择的机构实践将受益于更强的理论基础、更多的规划和试点投资、语言的一致使用、更多的定性方法和创新方法。需要健全的资助机制来推进这些目标。