Adverse work conditions may be to blame for the decline in the number of primary care physicians nationwide, according to
a study published in the latest issue of the Annals of Internal Medicine.
 Photo: Getty Images/Digital Vision/Darrin Klimek
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"Unfavorable work conditions are associated with stress, burnout, and intent to leave for primary care physicians," says Anita
Varkey, MD, FACP, study author and assistant professor in the department of medicine, Loyola University Chicago Stritch School
of Medicine. "These factors contribute to poor job satisfaction, which is among the reasons we are seeing a decrease in the
number of primary care physicians."
The Association of American Medical Colleges estimates that the overall shortage of doctors may grow to 124,400 by 2025.
"There are not enough primary care physicians to meet current needs," adds Dr. Varkey, who also is medical director of the
general medicine clinic at Loyola Outpatient Center, Loyola University Health System. "These findings suggest that a chaotic
clinic environment may further exacerbate this problem and potentially lead to lower quality of patient care due to physician
turnover and lack of continuity in care." Data for this study were collected from 422 family practitioners and general internists and 1,795 of their adult patients
with diabetes, hypertension, or heart failure at 119 clinics in New York and the Midwest. Researchers asked study participants
about perception of clinic workflow (time pressure and pace), work control, organizational culture, physician satisfaction,
stress, burnout, and intent to leave practice.
The results: 53.1 percent of physicians reported time pressure during office visits, 48.1 percent said their work pace was
chaotic, 78.4 percent noted low control over their work, and 26.5 percent reported burnout. Adverse workflow (time pressure
and chaotic environments), low work control, and unfavorable organizational culture were strongly associated with low physician
satisfaction, high stress, burnout, and intent to leave. Some work conditions also were associated with lower quality of patient
care and more errors, but findings were inconsistent across work conditions and medical diagnoses.
The authors indicated that interventions in primary care clinics should target measures to reduce physician burnout, clinic
chaos, and work-control measures. A healthier workplace for physicians may result in better recruitment and retention of primary
care physicians, which may then translate to higher quality patient care.
QUOTE OF THE MONTH
"On average, students in online learning conditions performed better than those receiving face-to-face instruction."
—Department of Education, "Evaluation of Evidence-Based Practices in Online Learning: A Meta-Analysis and Review of Online
Learning Studies," 2009.