TY - JOUR
T1 - How does the workload and work activities of procedural GPs compare to non-procedural GPs?
AU - Russell, Deborah J.
AU - McGrail, Matthew R.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work is part of the MABEL longitudinal study of Australian doctors. MABEL is funded by the National Health and Medical Research Council (Health Services Research Grant: 2008e2011; and Centre for Research Excellence in Medical Workforce Dynamics: 2012e2016), with additional funding from the Commonwealth Department of Health (in 2008) and Health Workforce Australia (in 2013). The views in this paper are those of the authors. We thank the other members of the MABEL team for their support and input, and especially acknowledge the doctors who give their valuable time to participate in MABEL. Both authors made substantial contributions to the conception of this paper and to drafting the paper. Both authors agree to be accountable for all aspects of the work in this paper and have given their approval for submission of the paper in its current state.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 National Rural Health Alliance Inc.
PY - 2017/8
Y1 - 2017/8
N2 - Objectives: To investigate patterns of Australian GP procedural activity and associations with:. geographical remoteness and population size hours worked in hospitals and in total; and availability for on-call. Design and participants: National annual panel survey (Medicine in Australia: Balancing Employment and Life) of Australian GPs, 2011–2013. Main outcome measures: Self-reported geographical work location, hours worked in different settings, and on-call availability per usual week, were analysed against GP procedural activity in anaesthetics, obstetrics, surgery or emergency medicine. Results: Analysis of 9301 survey responses from 4638 individual GPs revealed significantly increased odds of GP procedural activity in anaesthetics, obstetrics or emergency medicine as geographical remoteness increased and community population size decreased, albeit with plateauing of the effect-size from medium-sized (population 5000–15 000) rural communities. After adjusting for confounders, procedural GPs work more hospital and more total hours each week than non-procedural GPs. In 2011 this equated to GPs practising anaesthetics, obstetrics, surgery, and emergency medicine providing 8% (95%CI 0, 16), 13% (95%CI 8, 19), 8% (95%CI 2, 15) and 18% (95%CI 13, 23) more total hours each week, respectively. The extra hours are attributable to longer hours worked in hospital settings, with no reduction in private consultation hours. Procedural GPs also carry a significantly higher burden of on-call. Conclusions: The longer working hours and higher on-call demands experienced by rural and remote procedural GPs demand improved solutions, such as changes to service delivery models, so that long-term procedural GP careers are increasingly attractive to current and aspiring rural GPs.
AB - Objectives: To investigate patterns of Australian GP procedural activity and associations with:. geographical remoteness and population size hours worked in hospitals and in total; and availability for on-call. Design and participants: National annual panel survey (Medicine in Australia: Balancing Employment and Life) of Australian GPs, 2011–2013. Main outcome measures: Self-reported geographical work location, hours worked in different settings, and on-call availability per usual week, were analysed against GP procedural activity in anaesthetics, obstetrics, surgery or emergency medicine. Results: Analysis of 9301 survey responses from 4638 individual GPs revealed significantly increased odds of GP procedural activity in anaesthetics, obstetrics or emergency medicine as geographical remoteness increased and community population size decreased, albeit with plateauing of the effect-size from medium-sized (population 5000–15 000) rural communities. After adjusting for confounders, procedural GPs work more hospital and more total hours each week than non-procedural GPs. In 2011 this equated to GPs practising anaesthetics, obstetrics, surgery, and emergency medicine providing 8% (95%CI 0, 16), 13% (95%CI 8, 19), 8% (95%CI 2, 15) and 18% (95%CI 13, 23) more total hours each week, respectively. The extra hours are attributable to longer hours worked in hospital settings, with no reduction in private consultation hours. Procedural GPs also carry a significantly higher burden of on-call. Conclusions: The longer working hours and higher on-call demands experienced by rural and remote procedural GPs demand improved solutions, such as changes to service delivery models, so that long-term procedural GP careers are increasingly attractive to current and aspiring rural GPs.
KW - Australia
KW - doctors
KW - generalist
KW - remote
KW - rural
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84992555103&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/ajr.12321
DO - 10.1111/ajr.12321
M3 - Article
C2 - 27600557
AN - SCOPUS:84992555103
SN - 1038-5282
VL - 25
SP - 219
EP - 226
JO - Australian Journal of Rural Health
JF - Australian Journal of Rural Health
IS - 4
ER -