Lambert Alyssa, Fleischer Sarah E, Atac Omer, Bazemore Andrew, Peterson Lars E
From the CHRISTUS Health/Texas A&M University School of Medicine - Family Medicine Residency, Corpus Christi, TX (AL); American Board of Family Medicine, Lexington, KY (SEF, AB, LEP); Health Management and Policy, College of Public Health, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY (OA); Public Health, International School of Medicine, Istanbul Medipol University, Istanbul, Turkiye (OA); Department of Family and Community Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY (LEP).
J Am Board Fam Med. 2025 May 12;38(1):28-45. doi: 10.3122/jabfm.2024.240201R1.
Geographic variation in physician scope of practice (SOP) has been documented but the causes remain unknown. We examined whether geographic variation in family physician (FP) SOP is explained by differences in the characteristics of the FPs, their practices, practice environment, or health care market.
We utilized 2 datasets from the American Board of Family Medicine (ABFM) from 2017 to 2022. The National Graduate Survey captures early career FPs while the Continuous Certification Questionnaire is administered to mid to late career FPs. We used a SOP score that ranges from 0 to 30 with a larger score reflecting a broader SOP. Bivariate analyses assessed for differences by Census division in clinician, practice, community, and health care market characteristics. A series of multilevel linear regression analyses tested if geographic differences in SOP were attenuated by the aforementioned characteristics.
Our analytic included 9,378 early career FPs and 28,832 mid to late career FPs in the unadjusted regression model. We found significant differences in clinician characteristics by division and cohort. In unadjusted results, SOP score differed by division and career stage within division (range 11.49 to 14.95 for later career FPs and 15.22 to 17.51 for early career FPs). Adjusting for clinician, practice, community, and health care market characteristics did not attenuate divisional variation in SOP.
Significant geographic variation in FP SOP was not explainable by adjustment for clinician, practice, community, and health care market characteristics. This suggests that health care variation is multifactorial and will require more multifaceted interventions to ameliorate.
医生执业范围(SOP)的地域差异已有记录,但原因尚不清楚。我们研究了家庭医生(FP)SOP的地域差异是否可以通过FP的特征、他们的执业情况、执业环境或医疗保健市场的差异来解释。
我们使用了美国家庭医学委员会(ABFM)2017年至2022年的两个数据集。全国毕业生调查收集早期职业FP的数据,而持续认证问卷则针对中期至后期职业FP进行。我们使用的SOP分数范围为0至30,分数越高表明SOP越广泛。双变量分析评估了不同人口普查分区在临床医生、执业、社区和医疗保健市场特征方面的差异。一系列多层次线性回归分析测试了SOP的地理差异是否会因上述特征而减弱。
在未调整的回归模型中,我们的分析纳入了9378名早期职业FP和28832名中期至后期职业FP。我们发现不同分区和队列的临床医生特征存在显著差异。在未调整的结果中,SOP分数因分区和分区内的职业阶段而异(后期职业FP的分数范围为11.49至14.95,早期职业FP的分数范围为15.22至17.51)。对临床医生、执业、社区和医疗保健市场特征进行调整后,并未减弱SOP的分区差异。
对临床医生、执业、社区和医疗保健市场特征进行调整并不能解释FP SOP中显著的地域差异。这表明医疗保健差异是多因素的,需要更全面的干预措施来改善。