Catherine M DesRoches1, Peter Buerhaus, Robert S Dittus, Karen Donelan. 1. C.M. DesRoches is senior scientist, Mathematica Policy Research, Cambridge, Massachusetts. P. Buerhaus is Valere Potter Professor of Nursing and director, Center for Interdisciplinary Health Workforce Studies, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee. R.S. Dittus is Albert and Bernard Werthan Professor of Medicine and associate vice chancellor for public health and health care, Vanderbilt University; and director, VA Tennessee Valley Geriatric Research, Education and Clinical Center, Nashville, Tennessee. K. Donelan is assistant professor, Department of Medicine, Mongan Institute for Health Policy at the Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The success of efforts to bolster the primary care workforce rests in part on how these clinicians view their professions and their willingness to recommend their careers to others. The authors sought to examine career and job satisfaction, perceptions of workforce shortages, and willingness to make career recommendations among primary care physicians (PCPs) and primary care nurse practitioners (PCNPs). METHOD: In 2012, the authors mailed a national survey concerning the issues above to 1,914 randomly chosen clinicians found on national databases: 957 PCPs and 957 PCNPs. RESULTS: A total of 972 eligible clinicians (505 PCPs, 467 PCNPs) returned the survey. Using standard opinion research procedures, the authors estimated there were approximately 1,589 eligible clinicians in their sample (response rate, 61.2%). PCNPs and PCPs were more likely to recommend a career as a PCNP than as a PCP, despite the perception among all clinicians of a serious shortage of PCPs nationally and in their own communities. This finding held among PCNPs who reported low workplace autonomy and among PCPs reporting that they were satisfied with their own careers. CONCLUSIONS: Efforts to solve the primary care workforce shortage that ignore the significant dissatisfaction of PCPs with their own careers are unlikely to be successful. Simply adding training slots and increasing reimbursement rates will do little to solve the problem if PCPs continue to view their own careers as ones they cannot recommend to others.
PURPOSE: The success of efforts to bolster the primary care workforce rests in part on how these clinicians view their professions and their willingness to recommend their careers to others. The authors sought to examine career and job satisfaction, perceptions of workforce shortages, and willingness to make career recommendations among primary care physicians (PCPs) and primary care nurse practitioners (PCNPs). METHOD: In 2012, the authors mailed a national survey concerning the issues above to 1,914 randomly chosen clinicians found on national databases: 957 PCPs and 957 PCNPs. RESULTS: A total of 972 eligible clinicians (505 PCPs, 467 PCNPs) returned the survey. Using standard opinion research procedures, the authors estimated there were approximately 1,589 eligible clinicians in their sample (response rate, 61.2%). PCNPs and PCPs were more likely to recommend a career as a PCNP than as a PCP, despite the perception among all clinicians of a serious shortage of PCPs nationally and in their own communities. This finding held among PCNPs who reported low workplace autonomy and among PCPs reporting that they were satisfied with their own careers. CONCLUSIONS: Efforts to solve the primary care workforce shortage that ignore the significant dissatisfaction of PCPs with their own careers are unlikely to be successful. Simply adding training slots and increasing reimbursement rates will do little to solve the problem if PCPs continue to view their own careers as ones they cannot recommend to others.
Authors: John A Batsis; Peter R DiMilia; Lillian M Seo; Karen L Fortuna; Meaghan A Kennedy; Heather B Blunt; Pamela J Bagley; Jessica Brooks; Emma Brooks; Soo Yeon Kim; Rebecca K Masutani; Martha L Bruce; Stephen J Bartels Journal: J Am Geriatr Soc Date: 2019-05-08 Impact factor: 5.562
Authors: John A Batsis; Auden C McClure; Aaron B Weintraub; David F Kotz; Sivan Rotenberg; Summer B Cook; Diane Gilbert-Diamond; Kevin Curtis; Courtney J Stevens; Diane Sette; Richard I Rothstein Journal: Obes Sci Pract Date: 2019-10-17