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The Rural Physician Workforce in Florida: A Survey of US‐ and Foreign‐Born Primary Care Physicians
Author(s) -
Brooks Robert G.,
Mardon Russell,
Clawson Art
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
the journal of rural health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.439
H-Index - 57
eISSN - 1748-0361
pISSN - 0890-765X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1748-0361.2003.tb00586.x
Subject(s) - workforce , medicine , physician supply , waiver , rural area , family medicine , rural health , primary care , service (business) , work (physics) , health care , nursing , environmental health , population , political science , business , mechanical engineering , pathology , marketing , law , engineering
Context: To meet the challenge of primary care needs in rural areas, continuing assessment of the demographics, training, and future work plans of practicing primary care physicians is needed. Purpose: This study's goal was to assess key characteristics of primary care physicians practicing in rural, suburban, and urban communities in Florida. Methods: Surveys were mailed to all of Florida's rural primary care physicians (n = 399) and a 10% sampling (n = 1236) of urban and suburban primary care physicians. Findings: Responses from 1000 physicians (272 rural, 385 urban, 343 suburban) showed that rural physicians were more likely to have been raised in a rural area, foreign‐born and trained, a National Health Service Corps member, or a J‐1 visa waiver program participant. Rural physicians were more likely to have been exposed to rural medical practice or living in a rural environment during their medical school and residency training. Factors such as rural upbringing and medical school training did not predict future rural practice with foreign‐born physicians. Overall, future plans for practice did not seem to differ between rural, urban, and suburban physicians. Conclusions: Recruiting and retaining doctors in rural areas can be best supported through a mission‐driven selection of medical students with subsequent training in medical school and residency in rural health issues. National programs such as the National Health Service Corps and the J‐1 visa waiver program also play important roles in rural physician selection and should be taken into account when planning for future rural health care needs.