is Senior Research Fellow, Menzies School of Health Research, Charles Darwin University, Northern Territory, Australia.
is former Junior Analyst, Robert Graham Center for Policy Studies in Family Medicine and Primary Care.
J Grad Med Educ. 2022 Aug;14(4):441-450. doi: 10.4300/JGME-D-21-01143.1.
Rural US populations face a chronic shortage of physicians and an increasing gap in life expectancy compared to urban US populations, creating a need to understand how to increase residency graduates' desire to practice in such areas.
This study quantifies associations between the amount of rural training during family medicine (FM) residencies and subsequent rural work.
American Medical Association (AMA) Masterfile, AMA graduate medical education (GME) supplement, American Board of Family Medicine certification, Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME), and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services hospital costs data were merged and analyzed. Multiple logistic regression measured associations between rural training and rural or urban practice in 2018 by all 12 162 clinically active physicians who completed a US FM residency accredited by the ACGME between 2008 and 2012. Analyses adjusted for key potential confounders (age, sex, program size, region, and medical school location and type) and clustering by resident program.
Most (91%, 11 011 of 12 162) residents had no rural training. A minority (14%, 1721 of 12 162) practiced in a rural location in 2018. Residents with no rural training comprised 80% (1373 of 1721) of those in rural practice in 2018. Spending more than half of residency training months in rural areas was associated with substantially increased odds of rural practice (OR 5.3-6.3). Only 4% (424 of 12 162) of residents spent more than half their training in rural locations, and only 5% (26 of 436) of FM training programs had residents training mostly in rural settings or community-based clinics.
There is a linear gradient between increasing levels of rural exposure in FM GME and subsequent rural work.
与美国城市人口相比,美国农村人口面临着医生长期短缺和预期寿命差距不断扩大的问题,因此需要了解如何增加住院医师在这些地区行医的意愿。
本研究量化了家庭医学(FM)住院医师培训期间的农村培训量与随后的农村工作之间的关联。
合并并分析了美国医学协会(AMA)主文件、AMA 研究生医学教育(GME)补充、美国内科医师学会家庭医学委员会认证、研究生医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)和医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心医院费用数据。通过多变量逻辑回归,测量了在 2008 年至 2012 年期间接受 ACGME 认证的美国 FM 住院医师培训的 2018 年所有 12162 名活跃临床医生中,农村培训与农村或城市实践之间的关联。分析调整了关键的潜在混杂因素(年龄、性别、项目规模、地区以及医学院所在地和类型)以及居民项目的聚类。
大多数(91%,11011/12162)居民没有农村培训。只有少数(14%,1721/12162)在 2018 年在农村地区行医。在 2018 年从事农村工作的人群中,没有农村培训的居民占 80%(1373/1721)。在农村地区接受超过一半住院医师培训的时间与农村工作的几率显著增加相关(OR 5.3-6.3)。只有 4%(12162 名居民中有 424 名)的居民在农村地区接受了超过一半的培训,只有 5%(436 个 FM 培训项目中有 26 个)的居民培训主要在农村地区或社区诊所进行。
在 FM GME 中,农村暴露水平与随后的农村工作之间存在线性梯度。