General practice registrars’ practice in outer metropolitan Australia: a cross-sectional comparison with rural and inner metropolitan areas

IF 1.2 4区 医学 Q4 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Australian journal of primary health Pub Date : 2024-09-13 DOI:10.1071/py23100
Michael Tran, Anna Ralston, Elizabeth Holliday, Amanda Tapley, Alison Fielding, Dominica Moad, Jocelyn Ledger, Susan Wearne, Andrew Davey, Mieke van Driel, Jean Ball, Vanessa Moran, Jason Dizon, Parker Magin
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Abstract

Background

General practice training in outer metropolitan (OM) areas contributes to patients’ access to care. Differences in clinical practice and training in rural versus urban areas have been established, but less is known about OM versus inner metropolitan (IM) differences – whether they offer a trainee learning experience of populations with distinct demographics and healthcare characteristics. This study sought to identify the characteristics and associations of general practice training in New South Wales and Australian Capital Territory OM areas, compared to IM and rural areas.

Methods

Cross-sectional analyses of data (2016–2020) from the Registrar Clinical Encounters in Training (ReCEnT) study, an ongoing cohort study of Australian GP registrars’ in-consultation clinical and educational experience and behaviours, were performed. Multinomial logistic regression assessed associations of rural/OM/IM practice location with registrar and practice factors, patient factors, consultation content factors and consultation action factors.

Results

Overall, 1308 registrars provided data from 177,026 consultations. For several variables, there was a pattern in the differences of associations across rural/OM/IM areas. Experience of care of older patients and Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander health were more likely in OM than IM areas. Care of patients from non-English speaking background was more likely in OM than in rural areas. Possible markers of healthcare access (specialist referrals, and pathology and imaging requests) were less likely in OM than in both IM and rural areas.

Conclusions

OM areas are distinct (and educationally rich) clinical learning environments, with distinct demographic characteristics and seeming healthcare access limitations. This finding has implications for workforce support and health resource allocation.

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澳大利亚大都市外围地区全科注册医师的执业情况:与农村和大都市内部地区的横截面比较
背景大都市外围(OM)地区的全科医学培训有助于患者获得医疗服务。农村地区与城市地区在临床实践和培训方面的差异已经得到了证实,但人们对外部都市区与内部都市区(IM)的差异知之甚少--它们是否能为受训者提供具有不同人口统计和医疗保健特征的学习体验。本研究旨在确定新南威尔士州和澳大利亚首都领地OM地区与IM和农村地区相比,全科培训的特点和关联。方法对来自注册医师临床培训(ReCEnT)研究的数据(2016-2020 年)进行了横断面分析,该研究是对澳大利亚全科医师注册医师的会诊临床和教育经验及行为进行的一项持续性队列研究。多项式逻辑回归评估了农村/OM/IM 执业地点与注册医师和执业因素、患者因素、会诊内容因素和会诊行为因素之间的关联。结果共有 1308 名注册医师提供了 177026 次会诊的数据。就几个变量而言,农村/OM/IM 地区之间的关联存在差异。OM地区比IM地区更有可能出现老年患者护理经验和土著居民和/或托雷斯海峡岛民健康状况。OM地区比农村地区更有可能为非英语背景的患者提供医疗服务。与 IM 和农村地区相比,OM 地区更不可能提供医疗服务(专家转诊、病理和成像请求)。结论OM地区是独特的(教育资源丰富的)临床学习环境,具有独特的人口特征和似乎存在的医疗服务限制。这一发现对劳动力支持和医疗资源分配具有重要意义。
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来源期刊
Australian journal of primary health
Australian journal of primary health 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
15.40%
发文量
136
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Australian Journal of Primary Health integrates the theory and practise of community health services and primary health care. The journal publishes high-quality, peer-reviewed research, reviews, policy reports and analyses from around the world. Articles cover a range of issues influencing community health services and primary health care, particularly comprehensive primary health care research, evidence-based practice (excluding discipline-specific clinical interventions) and primary health care policy issues. Australian Journal of Primary Health is an important international resource for all individuals and organisations involved in the planning, provision or practise of primary health care. Australian Journal of Primary Health is published by CSIRO Publishing on behalf of La Trobe University.
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