Campos-Castillo Celeste
Department of Media and Information, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, United States.
JMIR Form Res. 2023 Aug 16;7:e38965. doi: 10.2196/38965.
The COVID-19 pandemic overburdened primary care clinicians. For nurse practitioners (NPs) to alleviate the burden, the public must be willing to see an NP over a physician. Those with poor health tended to continue seeking care during the pandemic, suggesting that they may be willing to see an NP.
The aim of this study is to evaluate the public's willingness to see an NP for primary care and how this may be associated with their beliefs about the local supply of physicians and self-rated health. Two studies were conducted: (1) a survey to identify correlations and (2) an experiment to assess how willingness is dependent on information about the local supply of physicians.
The survey and experiment were conducted digitally in April and December 2020, respectively. Participants were US adults recruited from Amazon's Mechanical Turk platform. The key independent variables were self-rated health, which was a dichotomized 5-point scale (excellent, very good, good vs fair, and poor), and beliefs about local physician supply. The survey measured beliefs about local physician supply, while the experiment manipulated beliefs by altering information the participants read about the local supply of physicians. Willingness to see an NP was assessed in 2 ways. First as an overall preference over a physician and the second as a preference given 2 clinically significant scenarios in which participants imagined they were experiencing either coughing or a headache (presentation order randomized). Multiple regressions and ANOVAs were used to assess how beliefs about the local physician supply and self-rated health were associated with overall willingness to see an NP. Bivariate probits simultaneously estimated willingness to see an NP in the 2 clinically significant scenarios.
The survey showed that concerns about physician supply were associated with lower willingness to see an NP among respondents with comparatively better health but a greater willingness among respondents with comparatively worse health. The experiment suggests that only the latter is causal. For the 2 clinically significant scenarios, these patterns appeared for the coughing scenario in the survey and the headache scenario in the experiment.
US adults with comparatively worse self-rated health become more willing to see an NP for primary care when they hear information that raises their concerns about the local physician supply. The differences between the survey and experiment results may be useful for interpreting findings from future studies. Findings may aid in managing finite health care resources during public health crises and crafting successful messaging by NP advocacy groups. Efforts to address nursing shortages will also be needed.
新冠疫情使初级保健临床医生不堪重负。为了让执业护士(NP)减轻负担,公众必须愿意选择执业护士而非医生就诊。健康状况较差的人群在疫情期间往往会继续寻求医疗服务,这表明他们可能愿意找执业护士看病。
本研究旨在评估公众找执业护士进行初级保健的意愿,以及这与他们对当地医生供应情况的看法和自我健康评级之间的关系。研究进行了两项:(1)一项调查以确定相关性;(2)一项实验以评估意愿如何取决于有关当地医生供应的信息。
调查和实验分别于2020年4月和12月以数字方式进行。参与者是从亚马逊的Mechanical Turk平台招募的美国成年人。关键自变量是自我健康评级,采用二分制的5分制量表(优秀、非常好、良好与一般、差),以及对当地医生供应情况的看法。调查测量了对当地医生供应情况的看法,而实验通过改变参与者阅读的有关当地医生供应的信息来操纵看法。找执业护士看病的意愿通过两种方式进行评估。首先是作为总体上相对于医生的偏好,其次是在两种具有临床意义的情景下的偏好,即参与者想象自己正在咳嗽或头痛(呈现顺序随机)。使用多元回归和方差分析来评估对当地医生供应情况的看法和自我健康评级与找执业护士看病的总体意愿之间的关系。二元概率模型同时估计在两种具有临床意义的情景下找执业护士看病的意愿。
调查显示,对医生供应情况的担忧与健康状况相对较好的受访者找执业护士看病的意愿较低相关,但与健康状况相对较差的受访者意愿较高相关。实验表明只有后者具有因果关系。对于两种具有临床意义的情景,这些模式在调查中的咳嗽情景和实验中的头痛情景中出现。
自我健康评级相对较差的美国成年人,当他们听到引起对当地医生供应情况担忧的信息时,更愿意找执业护士进行初级保健。调查和实验结果之间的差异可能有助于解释未来研究的结果。这些发现可能有助于在公共卫生危机期间管理有限的医疗资源,并为执业护士倡导组织制定成功的宣传信息。同时也需要努力解决护理短缺问题。