Block S D, Clark-Chiarelli N, Peters A S, Singer J D
Department of Ambulatory Care and Prevention, Harvard Medical School and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care, Boston, MA 02215, USA.
JAMA. 1996 Sep 4;276(9):677-82.
To describe the attitudes toward and perceptions of primary care education and practice among academic health center constituents.
Descriptive study using confidential telephone interviews (October 1993 to March 1994) of national stratified probability samples of first- and fourth-year medical students, residents, clinical faculty, internal medicine and pediatrics residency training directors and chairs, and deans (N=2293).
Five areas were examined: respondents' specialty orientation, attitudes toward the competence of primary care physicians, encouragement and positive regard for primary care, exposure to primary care-related educational experiences, and socioemotional orientation. The response rate was 84%. Respondents generally perceive primary care tasks as not requiring high levels of expertise; nearly half believe that generalists are not the best physicians to manage patients with serious illness and that the quality of primary care research is inferior to that in other fields. Attitudes are more positive toward the quality of primary care teaching. Learners perceive little encouragement for generalist careers and negative attitudes toward generalists among faculty, and view the quality of their primary care training as inferior to that for specialty practice. Those who have progressed further in the academic medicine hierarchy generally report lower levels of socioemotional orientation than individuals at earlier phases of career development.
Despite changes in the health care system and in education, students and residents encounter an atmosphere that is chilly toward primary care. If medical educators seek to optimize enthusiasm and preparation for primary care careers, they must develop approaches to changing the attitudes, values and composition of their faculties.
描述学术健康中心人员对初级保健教育与实践的态度及看法。
采用描述性研究,于1993年10月至1994年3月对全国分层概率抽样的一年级和四年级医学生、住院医师、临床教员、内科和儿科住院医师培训主任及主席以及院长进行保密电话访谈(N = 2293)。
考察了五个方面:受访者的专业倾向、对初级保健医生能力的态度、对初级保健的鼓励与积极评价、接触初级保健相关教育经历的情况以及社会情感倾向。回复率为84%。受访者普遍认为初级保健任务不需要高水平的专业知识;近一半的人认为通科医生不是管理重症患者的最佳医生,且初级保健研究的质量低于其他领域。对初级保健教学质量的态度更为积极。学习者感到对通科医生职业的鼓励很少,教员对通科医生持消极态度,并且认为他们的初级保健培训质量低于专科实践培训质量。在学术医学层级中晋升较高的人通常比职业发展早期阶段的人报告的社会情感倾向水平更低。
尽管医疗保健系统和教育发生了变化,但学生和住院医师仍面临着对初级保健冷淡的氛围。如果医学教育工作者希望优化对初级保健职业的热情和准备,他们必须制定方法来改变教员的态度、价值观和构成。