我们能从离开西班牙的全科医生身上学到什么?一项混合方法国际研究。

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC ACS Applied Electronic Materials Pub Date : 2024-01-23 DOI:10.1186/s12960-023-00888-4
Sara Calderón-Larrañaga, Ángel González-De-La-Fuente, Ana Belén Espinosa-González, Verónica Casado-Vicente, Óscar Brito-Fernandes, Niek Klazinga, Dionne Kringos
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:医疗卫生人员的国际流动会影响医疗卫生系统的绩效,并与医疗卫生政策和规划中的人力资源密切相关。迄今为止,很少有研究探讨全科医生(GPs)移民的原因。这项混合方法研究旨在调查西班牙培训的全科医生移民的原因,并制定与西班牙初级医疗相关的留住和招聘全科医生的卫生政策建议:本研究采用了解释性顺序混合方法研究设计,将调查与半结构式访谈和焦点小组相结合,访谈对象为在西班牙获得资格证书且在研究期间居住在海外的全科医生。调查数据研究了全科医生离开西班牙的原因及其回国意向,并采用定量方法进行了分析。访谈和焦点小组的记录围绕全科医生对加强西班牙留住人才和招聘人才的见解进行了专题分析:调查共有 158 名受访者,估计回复率为 25.4%。薪酬不足(75.3%)、工作不稳定和临时性(67.7%)、工作量过大(67.7%)、初级保健管理不善(55.7%)、工作场所缺乏灵活性(43.7%)和个人情况(43.7%)是离开西班牙的主要原因。近一半的受访者(48.7%)表示,如果工作条件有所改善,他们会考虑重返西班牙全科医疗机构。与受访者(24 人)的访谈和焦点小组讨论表明,有必要改善雇佣合同的质量、工作条件、专业发展机会以及基层医疗机构的管理,以有效留住和招聘全科医生:结论:在西班牙,留住和招聘全科医生的工作应侧重于薪酬、工作保障、灵活性、受保护的工作量、专业发展和管理。我们提出了十项留住和招聘全科医生的建议,希望这些建议能为采取紧急政策行动提供参考,以解决西班牙初级医疗中现有的和预计会出现的全科医生短缺问题。
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What can we learn from general practitioners who left Spain? A mixed methods international study.

Background: International mobility of health workforce affects the performance of health systems and has major relevance in human resources for health policy and planning. To date, there has been little research exploring the reasons why general practitioners (GPs) migrate. This mixed methods study aimed to investigate the reasons why Spain-trained GPs migrate and develop GP retention and recruitment health policy recommendations relevant to Spanish primary care.

Methods: The study followed an explanatory sequential mixed methods study design combining surveys with semi-structured interviews and focus groups with GPs who qualified in Spain and were living overseas at the time of the study. The survey data examined the reasons why GPs left Spain and their intention to return and were analysed using quantitative methods. The transcripts from interviews and focus groups centred on GPs' insights to enhance retention and recruitment in Spain and were analysed thematically.

Results: The survey had 158 respondents with an estimated 25.4% response rate. Insufficient salary (75.3%), job insecurity and temporality (67.7%), excessive workload (67.7%), poor primary care governance (55.7%), lack of flexibility in the workplace (43.7%) and personal circumstances (43.7%) were the main reasons for leaving Spain. Almost half of the respondents (48.7%) would consider returning to Spanish general practice if their working conditions improved. Interviews and focus groups with respondents (n = 24) pointed towards the need to improve the quality of employment contracts, working conditions, opportunities for professional development, and governance in primary care for effective retention and recruitment.

Conclusion: Efforts to improve GP retention and recruitment in Spain should focus on salary, job security, flexibility, protected workload, professional development, and governance. We draw ten GP retention and recruitment recommendations expected to inform urgent policy action to tackle existing and predicted GP shortages in Spanish primary care.

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