McClendon B J, Politzer R M, Christian E, Fernandez E S
Bureau of Health Professions, Health Resources and Services Administration, Rockville, MD, USA.
Public Health Rep. 1997 May-Jun;112(3):231-9.
To estimate the need for downsizing the physician workforce in a changing health care environment.
First assuming that 1993 physician-to-population ratios would be maintained, the authors derived downsizing estimates by determining the annual growth in the supply of specialists necessary to maintain these ratios (sum of losses from death and retirement plus increase necessary to parallel population growth) and compared them with an estimate of the number of new physicians being produced (average annual number of board certificates issued between 1990 and 1994). Then, assuming that workforce needs would change in a system increasingly dominated by managed care, the authors estimated specialty-specific downsizing needs for a managed care dominated environment using data from several sources.
To maintain the 1993 199.6 active physicians per 100,000 population ratio, 14,644 new physicians would be needed each year. Given that an average of 20,655 physicians were certified each year between 1990 and 1994, at least 6011 fewer new physicians were needed annually to maintain 1993 levels. To maintain the 132.2 ratio of active non-primary care physicians per 100,000 population, the system needed to produce 9698 non-primary care physicians per year, because an average of 14,527 new non-primary care physicians entered the workforce between 1990 and 1994, downsizing by 4829, or 33%, was needed. To maintain the 66.8 active primary care physicians per 100,000 population ratio, 4946 new primary care physicians were needed per year, since primary care averaged 6128 new certifications per year, a downsizing of 1182, or 20% was indicated. Only family practice, neurosurgery, otolaryngology, and urology did not require downsizing. Seventeen medical and hospital-based specialties, including 7 of 10 internal medicine subspecialties, needed downsizing by at least 40%. Less downsizing in general was needed in the surgical specialties and in psychiatry. A managed care dominated-system would call for greater downsizing in most of the non-primary care specialties.
These data support the need for downsizing the nation's physician supply, especially in the internal medicine subspecialties and hospital support specialties and to a lesser extent among surgeons and primary care physicians.
评估在不断变化的医疗环境中缩减医师队伍规模的必要性。
首先假设维持1993年的医师与人口比例,作者通过确定维持这些比例所需的专科医师供应的年增长率(死亡和退休造成的损失之和加上与人口增长同步所需的增长)得出缩减规模的估计值,并将其与新产生的医师数量估计值(1990年至1994年间颁发的董事会证书的年均数量)进行比较。然后,假设在一个日益由管理式医疗主导的系统中劳动力需求会发生变化,作者使用来自多个来源的数据估计了管理式医疗主导环境下特定专科的缩减规模需求。
为维持1993年每10万人口中有199.6名执业医师的比例,每年需要14644名新医师。鉴于1990年至1994年间每年平均有20655名医师获得认证,为维持1993年的水平,每年至少需要少6011名新医师。为维持每10万人口中有132.2名非初级保健执业医师的比例,该系统每年需要培养9698名非初级保健医师,因为1990年至1994年间平均有14527名新的非初级保健医师进入劳动力市场,需要缩减4829名,即33%。为维持每10万人口中有66.8名初级保健执业医师的比例,每年需要4946名新的初级保健医师,因为初级保健每年平均有6128名新认证医师,表明需要缩减1182名,即20%。只有家庭医学、神经外科、耳鼻喉科和泌尿外科不需要缩减。包括10个内科亚专科中的7个在内的17个医学和医院专科需要至少缩减40%。外科专科和精神病学总体上需要的缩减较少。一个由管理式医疗主导的系统在大多数非初级保健专科中将需要更大规模的缩减。
这些数据支持缩减国家医师供应规模的必要性,特别是在内科亚专科和医院支持专科,在外科医师和初级保健医师中需求较小。