Literature DB >> 28925913

How underserviced rural communities approach physician recruitment: changes following the opening of a socially accountable medical school in northern Ontario.

Oxana Mian1, John C Hogenbirk1, Wayne Warry1, Roger P Strasser2.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: The Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM) opened in 2005 with a social accountability mandate to address a long history of physician shortages in northern Ontario. The objective of this qualitative study was to understand the school's effect on recruitment of family physicians into medically underserviced rural communities of northern Ontario.
METHODS: We conducted a multiple case study of 8 small rural communities in northern Ontario that were considered medically underserviced by the provincial ministry of health and had successfully recruited NOSM-trained physicians. We interviewed 10 people responsible for physician recruitment in these communities. Interview transcripts were analyzed by means of an inductive and iterative thematic method.
RESULTS: All 8 communities were NOSM medical education sites with populations of 1600-16 000. Positive changes, linked to collaboration with NOSM, included achieving a full complement of physicians in 5 communities with previous chronic shortages of 30%-50% of the physician supply, substantial reduction in recruitment expenditures, decreased reliance on locums and a shift from crisis management to long-term planning in recruitment activities. The magnitude of positive changes varied across communities, with individual leadership and communities' active engagement being key factors in successful physician recruitment.
CONCLUSION: Locating medical education sites in underserviced rural communities in northern Ontario and engaging these communities in training rural physicians showed great potential to improve the ability of small rural communities to recruit family physicians and alleviate physician shortages in the region.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28925913

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Can J Rural Med        ISSN: 1203-7796


  6 in total

1.  Distributed education enables distributed economic impact: the economic contribution of the Northern Ontario School of Medicine to communities in Canada.

Authors:  John C Hogenbirk; David R Robinson; Roger P Strasser
Journal:  Health Econ Rev       Date:  2021-06-09

2.  Commentary: Burning Platforms, Icebergs and Tipping Points - Canada Needs a Single Socially Accountable Healthcare System.

Authors:  Roger Strasser
Journal:  Healthc Policy       Date:  2022-08

3.  Shaping health: conducting a community health needs assessment in culturally diverse peripheral population groups.

Authors:  Nosaiba Rayan-Gharra; Marganit Ofir-Gutler; Sivan Spitzer
Journal:  Int J Equity Health       Date:  2022-09-12

4.  Community engagement: A central feature of NOSM's socially accountable distributed medical education.

Authors:  Roger Strasser; John Hogenbirk; Kristen Jacklin; Marion Maar; Geoffrey Hudson; Wayne Warry; Hoi Cheu; Tim Dubé; Dean Carson
Journal:  Can Med Educ J       Date:  2018-03-27

5.  Rural training pathways: the return rate of doctors to work in the same region as their basic medical training.

Authors:  Matthew R McGrail; Belinda G O'Sullivan; Deborah J Russell
Journal:  Hum Resour Health       Date:  2018-10-22

6.  It takes a community to train a future physician: social support experienced by medical students during a community-engaged longitudinal integrated clerkship.

Authors:  Timothy Dubé; Robert Schinke; Roger Strasser
Journal:  Can Med Educ J       Date:  2019-07-24
  6 in total

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