| Literature DB >> 21749692 |
Caroline O Laurence1, Linda E Black, Carolyn Cheah, Jonathan Karnon.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In Australia, training for general practice (GP) occurs within private practices and their involvement in teaching can have significant financial costs. At the same time there are growing demands for clinical places for all disciplines and for GP there is concern that there are insufficient teaching practices to meet the demand at the medical student, prevocational and vocational training levels. One option to address this may be to change how teaching occurs in the practice. A question that arises in posing such an option is whether different models of teaching change the costs for a teaching practice. The aim of this study is to determine the net financial outcome of teaching models in private GP.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21749692 PMCID: PMC3146948 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6920-11-45
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Description of the teaching model categories
| Category 1 | Concurrent teaching of same level-learners: this model facilitates economies of scale from a supervisor integrating their teaching of more than one same level learner |
|---|---|
| Category 2 | Vertically integrated teaching across different levels of learners: these models incorporate vertically integrated teaching where a GP registrar, along with the GP supervisor, participates in teaching |
| Category 3 | A 'GP Teacher' undertaking all required teaching across all levels of learners: this model incorporates all required teaching activity plus a significant percentage of the supervisory responsibility into the 'GP Teacher's' workload with only a minimal independent patient load |
Percentage changes in cost parameters from comparison model for each teaching model
| Description | Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GP supervisor teaching two junior registrars | GP supervisor teaching one junior registrar. Registrar teaching one junior medical student | GP supervisor teaching one senior registrar and one senior medical student. Registrar teaching one intern | ||||||
| Preparation time | -25 | -75 | No change | +100 | No change | -75 | No change | +100 |
| Additional time to session | -20 | -80 | +20 | +100 | No change | -80 | +30 | +100 |
| Staff Admin time | -30 | No change | No change | - | No change | No change | No change | - |
| GP Admin time | No change | -75 | No change | +100 | No change | -25 | No change | +25 |
| Teacher upskilling time | -50 | -100 | No change | +100 | No change | -100 | No change | +100 |
| Infrastructure-room rental foregone and house rental | No change | No change | No change | - | No change | No change | No change | - |
GPT1 = the first six month placement for a GP registrar in community general practice and was previously referred to as Basic Term. They are referred to as junior registrars. GPT2 = the second six month placement for a GP registrar in community general practice and was previously referred to as Advanced Term. They are referred to as junior registrars GPT3 = third six month placement for a GP registrar in community general practice and was previously referred to as the first part of a 12 month Subsequent Term. They are referred to as senior registrars. 6th year = a medical student in the last year of medical school at the University of Adelaide and deemed a senior medical student. 4th year = a medical student in their first clinical year at the University of Adelaide and deemed a junior medical student.
Assumptions, unit costs and benefits and data source for the GP Teacher model
| Assumptions | Unit cost and benefits and data source (Aus$) | |
|---|---|---|
| 25% efficiencies due to economies of scale by having a GP Teacher | ||
| Increased service provision by other general practitioners | ||
| GP teacher has small independent patient load-does 3 sessions per week (based on 3.5 hours per session). 80% of billing retained by GP Teacher. | GP hourly rate based on 4 Level B (2 × MBS fee $34.40+ 2 × AMA fee $64) +100% bulk billing item (mean $8.35 of urban and rural location rate). Source: AMA | |
| 15 hours medical student teaching per week 7 hours of which involves seeing patients (2 per patients per hour). GP teacher receives 100% of billings | GP hourly rate based on 4 Level B (2 × MBS fee $34.40+ 2 × AMA fee $64) +100% bulk billing item (mean $8.35 of urban and rural location rate): Source: AMA | |
| Receives all teaching allowance Practice Incentive Payment | $100 per session (3 hours)-max 2 session per day through Medicare Australia | |
| GP teacher receives 100% of income generated by the interns | Interns-Income per patient $453.38 (based on Item 23 100% fee + bulk billing item) and mean number of patients seen per week from AOGP database | |
| Receives all teaching allowance from PGPPP | $43,680 per annum (urban) or $38,400 per annum (rural) for PGY1 | |
| $32,296 per year for GPT1 | ||
| Practice retains all practice subsidies | Interns-$29,000 per annum | |
| Practice retains % GP registrar income | 45% of income generated by GP registrar | |
| Practice retains 20% of income generated by the GP teacher from their 3 independent sessions per week | ||
| Costs of teaching by GP and practice accounted for but with an efficiency saving of teaching time by 25% | ||
| The practice retaining 30% of income generated by the other general practitioners during the 10 hours they are now no longer involved in teaching (based on only saving 50% of that time) | GP income: hourly rate based on 4 Level B (2 × MBS fee $34.40+ 2 × AMA fee $64) +100% bulk billing item (mean $8.35 of urban and rural location rate). Source: AMA | |
AMA = Australian Medical Association MBS = Medicare Benefits Schedule GPET = General Practice Education and Training Ltd.
Net financial outcome per week for various teaching models (Aus$)
| MODEL 1-Concurrent learners | MODEL 2-Vertically integrated teaching | MODEL 3-Vertically integrated teaching | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Model 1 | Traditional model | Difference: | Model 2 | Traditional model | Difference: Model-Traditional | Model 3 | Traditional model | Difference (Model-Traditional) | |
| Direct teaching activities | 1781 | 2243 | -462 | 1315 | 2659 | -1344 | 2460 | 3518 | -1058 |
| Administrative activities | 92 | 121 | -28 | 73 | 102 | -29 | 165 | 160 | 5 |
| Teacher upskilling | 57 | 113 | -57 | 56 | 91 | -36 | 99 | 137 | -38 |
| Infrastructure | 1493 | 1493 | 0 | 898 | 898 | 0 | 1724 | 1724 | 0 |
| Income to practice | 3206 | 3206 | 0 | 658 | 1516 | -858 | 2140 | 2968 | 0 |
| Rental subsidy | 80 | 80 | 0 | 40 | 40 | 0 | 148 | 148 | -827 |
| Teacher upskilling payment | 92 | 92 | 0 | 46 | 46 | 0 | 62 | 62 | 0 |
| Teaching allowance | 600 | 600 | 0 | 150 | 150 | 0 | 1739 | 1739 | 0 |
| Practice subsidy | 448 | 448 | 0 | 112 | 112 | 0 | 577 | 577 | 0 |
| Total benefits | 0 | ||||||||
| Total costs | - | ||||||||
Note: totals not exact due to rounding.
Per week costs and income/benefits of GP Teacher Model (Aus$)
| GP Teacher | Practice | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Income generated by 'other general practitioners' not required to perform majority of teaching and supervisory roles | 636 | ||
| Income generated by GP independent clinical session | 1794 | 448 | |
| Income generated by GP Teacher signing off intern patients | 2332 | - | |
| Income generated by GP Teacher teaching medical students with patients | 747 | - | |
| Teaching benefits | 3354 | 929 | |
Total note exact due to rounding.