首页> 外文期刊>Academic Medicine: Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges >Medical education in the caribbean: Quantifying the contribution of caribbean-educated physicians to the primary care workforce in the united states
【24h】

Medical education in the caribbean: Quantifying the contribution of caribbean-educated physicians to the primary care workforce in the united states

机译:加勒比地区的医学教育:量化接受加勒比海地区教育的医师对美国初级保健人员的贡献

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

Purpose: There is a projected shortage of primary care physicians in the United States, and providers other than U.S medical graduates may be needed to fill the gap. The authors conducted this study to quantify the contribution that Caribbean-educated physicians make to the U.S. primary care workforce. METHOD: Using May 2011 American Medical Association Physician Masterfile and Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates data, the authors identified physicians whose Masterfile records indicated that they provided direct patient care. They classified these physicians according to the type of medical school from which they graduated: graduates of Caribbean medical schools (C-IMGs), graduates of other international medical schools (non-C-IMGs), graduates of U.S. MD-granting medical schools (USMGs), and graduates of U.S. DO-granting medical schools (DOs). They then calculated the frequencies and percentages of self-designated primary care specialties for each physician classification. RESULTS: There were 684,469 physicians in direct patient care categories for whom data were available concerning medical school and self-designated specialty. About one-quarter of these physicians were graduates of international medical schools (C-IMGs: 3.0%, n = 20,333; non-C-IMGs: 20.4%, n = 139,415), and approximately three-quarters were U.S. medical school graduates (USMGs: 70.3%, n = 481,061; DOs: 6.4%, n = 43,660). Overall, C-IMGs had the highest proportion of physicians practicing in primary care specialties (56.7%) compared with non-C-IMGs (42.3%), USMGs (32.9%), and DOs (54.0%). CONCLUSIONS: More than half of Caribbean-educated physicians involved in direct patient care are practicing in primary care specialties, thereby making an important contribution to the U.S. primary care workforce.
机译:目的:预计美国的基层医疗医生短缺,可能需要除美国医学毕业生以外的提供者来填补缺口。作者进行了这项研究,以量化接受加勒比海教育的医生对美国初级保健工作人员的贡献。方法:作者使用2011年5月的美国医学会医师主档案和外国医学毕业生教育委员会的数据,确定了其主档案记录表明他们提供了直接患者护理的医师。他们根据毕业的医学院的类型对这些医生进行了分类:加勒比医学院(C-IMGs)的毕业生,其他国际医学院(non-C-IMGs)的毕业生,获得美国MD资助的医学院的毕业生( (USMGs),以及获得美国DO许可的医学院(DO)的毕业生。然后,他们为每种医师分类计算了自己指定的初级保健专业的频率和百分比。结果:在直接患者护理类别中有684,469位医生提供了有关医学院和自我指定专业的数据。这些医师中约四分之一是国际医学院的毕业生(C-IMG:3.0%,n = 20,333;非C-IMG:20.4%,n = 139,415),约四分之三是美国医学院的毕业生( USMG:70.3%,n = 481,061; DOs:6.4%,n = 43,660)。总体而言,与非C-IMG(42.3%),USMG(32.9%)和DO(54.0%)相比,C-IMG在基层医疗专业执业的医师比例最高(56.7%)。结论:参与直接患者护理的加勒比地区受过教育的医生中,有超过一半的人从事初级保健专业,从而为美国初级保健工作人员做出了重要贡献。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号