Sloan F A
Med Care. 1977 Apr;15(4):338-46. doi: 10.1097/00005650-197704000-00009.
This paper focuses on one aspect of access to physicians' services, the time patients spend obtaining physicians' service. Patient time is divided into travel and waiting time components. Communities in which the patient's total time commitment tend to be the highest are generally the most populous cities. Pairwise comparisons between central cities and non-central cities in the 22 largest Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas (SMSAs) reveal that patient is higher in central cities in the vast majority of cases. Although the area physician-population ratio tends to have the anticipated negative impact on patient time, the ratio explains very little of the total intercommunity variation in the latter variable. Implications for physician manpower policy are discussed.
本文关注获取医生服务的一个方面,即患者获得医生服务所花费的时间。患者时间分为出行时间和等待时间两部分。患者总时间投入往往最高的社区通常是人口最多的城市。对22个最大的标准都市统计区(SMSAs)中的中心城市和非中心城市进行两两比较发现,在绝大多数情况下,中心城市的患者时间更高。尽管地区医生与人口的比例往往会对患者时间产生预期的负面影响,但该比例在解释后者变量的社区间总差异方面作用甚微。文中还讨论了对医生人力政策的影响。