| Literature DB >> 29447259 |
Corinna Klingler1, Fatiha Ismail1, Georg Marckmann1, Katja Kuehlmeyer1.
Abstract
Hospitals in Germany employ increasing numbers of foreign-born and foreign-trained (FB&FT) physicians. Studies have investigated how FB&FT physicians experience their professional integration into the German healthcare system, however, the perspectives of stakeholders working with and shaping the work experiences of FB&FT physicians in German hospitals have so far been neglected. This study explores relevant stakeholders' opinions and attitudes towards FB&FT physicians-which likely influence how these physicians settle in-and how these opinions were formed. We conducted a qualitative interview study with 25 stakeholders working in hospitals or in health policy development. The interviews were analyzed within a constructivist research paradigm using methods derived from Grounded Theory (situational analysis as well as open, axial and selective coding). We found that stakeholders tended to focus on problems in FB&FT physicians' work performance. Participants criticized FB&FT physicians' work for deviating from presumably shared professional standards (skill or knowledge and behavioral standards). The professional standards invoked to justify problem-focused statements comprised the definition of an ideal behavior, attitude or ability and a tolerance range that was adapted in a dynamic process. Behavior falling outside the tolerance range was criticized as unacceptable, requiring action to prevent similar deviations in the future. Furthermore, we derived three strategies (minimization, homogenization and quality management) proposed by participants to manage deviations from assumed professional standards by FB&FT physicians. We critically reflect on the social processes of evaluation and problematization and question the legitimacy of professional standards invoked. We also discuss discriminatory tendencies visible in evaluative statements of some participants as well as in some of the strategies proposed. We suggest it will be key to develop and implement better support strategies for FB&FT physicians while also addressing problematic attitudes within the receiving system to further professional integration.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29447259 PMCID: PMC5814013 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0193010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Description of the sample (n = 25).
| Stakeholders by gender | |
| Female | 10 |
| Male | 15 |
| Stakeholders in the policy world by professional role (n = 11) | |
| Patient representatives | 2 |
| Representatives of nursing associations | 1 |
| Representatives of hospital associations | 1 |
| Representatives of physician chambers | 3 |
| Representatives of physician advocacy groups | 2 |
| Politicians (member of state parliament) | 1 |
| Employees of the federal ministry of health | 1 |
| Stakeholders in the hospital world by professional role (n = 14) | |
| Junior physicians | 5 |
| Head physicians (superior senior physicians) | 3 |
| Nursing directors | 2 |
| Medical directors | 2 |
| Hospital administration (human resources) | 1 |
| Administration of hospital group | 1 |
| Stakeholders from the hospital world by location (n = 14) | |
| Rural area, Bavaria (example hospital 1) | 5 |
| Rural area, Rhineland-Palatinate (example hospital 2) | 5 |
| Rural area, Bavaria | 1 |
| City area, Bavaria | 2 |
| City area, Berlin | 1 |
Fig 1Professional standards and dynamic adjustment of tolerance range.
Professional standards invoked in evaluating FB&FT physicians.
| Skill/knowledge standards | Good German language skills (written and verbal) |
| Understanding of the organization of the German healthcare system and care processes in the hospital | |
| Adequate medical knowledge and practical clinical skills | |
| Behavioral standards | Commitment to (advancement of own competencies for) patient care |
| Equal treatment of male and female colleagues and patients | |
| Being responsive to patients’ (sociocultural) desires and needs | |
| Involving patients in clinical decision-making | |
| Not favoring any particular patient group | |
| Acting cooperatively as part of a care team (professional groups referred to were primarily other physicians and nurses) | |
| Not forgoing life-prolonging treatment | |
| Not rejecting to treat a patient for religious or moral reasons | |
| Not considering resource use in clinical decision making | |
| Being honest about (limits of) one’s own competencies | |
| Being independent in specialist training | |
| Being able to give and receive direct criticism |
Strategies proposed to manage deviations from professional standards.
| Minimization strategy | Change selection criteria for medical students | |
| Increase medical school capacities | ||
| Improve working conditions in hospitals | ||
| Homogenization strategy | Create parallel system in which physician care for patients of the same ethnicity/nationality | |
| Quality management strategies | Support Integration | Offer additional training opportunities outside of hospitals |
| Enable hospitals to implement structured on-the-job training | ||
| Change working procedures to allow for double-checks | ||
| Control integration | Change licensure requirements | |
| Align licensure requirements across states | ||
| Adapt licensing processes | ||