Brulin Emma, Ekberg Kerstin, Landstad Bodil J, Lidwall Ulrik, Sjöström Malin, Wilczek Alexander
Unit of Occupational Medicine, Institute of Environmental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
Department of Health, Medicine, and Caring Sciences (HMV), Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden.
Front Psychol. 2023 Jul 7;14:1216229. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1216229. eCollection 2023.
The study aimed to investigate in which way performance-based reimbursement (PBR) systems in Swedish healthcare services (1) subjectively impacted physicians' work and patient care and (2) were associated with the occurrence of stress-induced exhaustion disorders among physicians.
The study applied a mixed-method design. Data were collected from a representative sample of Swedish physicians. In the questionnaire, respondents were asked to answer an open-ended question regarding their reflections on PBR. The answers to the open-ended question were analysed using thematic analysis. Respondents were also asked to rate the impact of PBR on their work. The association between PBR and self-rated stress-induced exhaustion disease was analysed with logistic regressions. Stress-induced exhaustion disorder was measured using the Burnout Assessment Scale.
Thematic analysis resulted in four themes: (1) Money talks, (2) Patients are affected, (3) Medical morals are challenged, and (4) PBR increase the quantity of illegitimate tasks. Logistic regressions showed that physicians who experienced PBR had an impact on their work and had a two-fold higher risk of stress-induced exhaustion disorder.
Our findings suggest that current reimbursement systems in Sweden play an essential role in Swedish healthcare and negatively influence physicians' work and health. Also, current PBR impact patients negatively. No previous study has explored the potentially harmful impact of PBR on how physicians perceive work, health and patient care. Results indicate that policymakers should be encouraged to deeply review PBR systems and focus on ways that they can limit the negative impact on physicians' work and health while meeting future challenges.
本研究旨在调查瑞典医疗服务中的基于绩效的报销(PBR)系统(1)如何主观地影响医生的工作和患者护理,以及(2)与医生中因压力导致的疲惫症的发生有何关联。
本研究采用了混合方法设计。数据收集自瑞典医生的代表性样本。在问卷中,受访者被要求回答一个关于他们对PBR的看法的开放式问题。使用主题分析法对开放式问题的答案进行分析。受访者还被要求对PBR对其工作的影响进行评分。使用逻辑回归分析PBR与自评压力导致的疲惫症之间的关联。使用倦怠评估量表来测量压力导致的疲惫症。
主题分析产生了四个主题:(1)金钱万能,(2)患者受到影响,(3)医学道德受到挑战,以及(4)PBR增加了非法任务的数量。逻辑回归显示,经历过PBR的医生其工作受到影响,且患压力导致的疲惫症的风险高出两倍。
我们的研究结果表明,瑞典目前的报销系统在瑞典医疗保健中起着至关重要的作用,并对医生的工作和健康产生负面影响。此外,当前的PBR对患者也有负面影响。此前没有研究探讨过PBR对医生如何看待工作、健康和患者护理的潜在有害影响。结果表明,应鼓励政策制定者深入审查PBR系统,并关注在应对未来挑战的同时,如何能够限制其对医生工作和健康的负面影响。