| Literature DB >> 25405030 |
Daniel S Rhee1, Jennifer E Heckman2, Sae-Rom Chae3, Lawrence C Loh4.
Abstract
Physician interest in global health, particularly among family physicians, is reflected by an increasing proliferation of field training and service experiences. However, translating initial training involvement into a defined and sustainable global health career remains difficult and beset by numerous barriers. Existing global health literature has largely examined training experiences and related ethical considerations while neglecting the role of career development in global health. To explore this, this paper extrapolates potential barriers to global health career involvement from existing literature and compares these to salary and skills requirements for archetypal physician positions in global health, presenting a framework of possible barriers to sustained physician participation in global health work. Notable barriers identified include financial limitations, scheduling conflicts, security/family concerns, skills limitations, limited awareness of opportunities, and specialty choice, with family practice often closely aligned with global health experience. Proposed solutions include financial support, protected time, family relocation support, and additional training. This framework delineates barriers to career involvement in global health by physicians. Further research regarding these barriers as well as potential solutions may help direct policy and initiatives to better utilize physicians, particularly family physicians, as a valuable global health human resource.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25405030 PMCID: PMC4227322 DOI: 10.1155/2014/728163
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Family Med ISSN: 2090-2050
Derived potential barriers to physician career involvement in global health work and potential solutions.
| Barriers | Solutions |
|---|---|
| (i) Finances | (i) Loan forgiveness programs |
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| (i) Time and scheduling conflicts | (i) Increased elective time |
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| (i) Inadequate global health training/competencies | (i) Incorporation of global health education into medical school curricula and training programs |
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| (i) Safety concerns | (i) Heightened awareness |
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| (i) Personal and family commitments | (i) Family support |
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| (i) Specialty choice | (i) Redefine specialty approach to global health |
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| (i) Ethical considerations | (i) Establish guiding principles for global health involvement |