Factors that influence scope-of-practice decisions of early-career family physicians Focus group study in Canada

CANADIAN FAMILY PHYSICIAN(2024)

引用 0|浏览0
暂无评分
摘要
Objective To explore perceptions of early -career family physicians on the personal, educational, organizational, community, and system factors that had influenced their scope -of -practice decisions and to compare the similarities and differences among these factors across all 13 Canadian jurisdictions. Design Qualitative descriptive study. Setting Canada. Participants Fifty-nine early -career family physicians who were 2 to 5 years into independent practice. Methods Data were collected using focus groups and were analyzed using deductive and inductive analysis techniques to identify patterns in the data within and across jurisdictions. Main findings Participants across all jurisdictions highlighted that personal factors (ie, interest, work -life balance and family life, financial considerations, and self -perceived competence and confidence) were most influential on scope -ofpractice decisions. Educational (ie, exposure during training, mentorship), organizational (ie, collegial support), community (ie, needs), and system (ie, payment models, funding for team -based care, governance) factors also influenced decisions about scope of practice. Experiences were similar across all jurisdictions for personal factors. Differences in experiences were reported across jurisdictions for educational, organizational, community, and system factors. Conclusion Decisions about scope of practice by early -career family physicians are highly influenced by personal factors followed by organizational, educational, community, and system factors. These findings suggest numerous strategies are needed to increase individuals' interest in providing comprehensive care in Canada. Educators should cultivate interest in comprehensive care among learners, strategically recruit trainees, provide targeted exposure and experiences, ensure competence and confidence are evaluated throughout and at the end of training, and introduce formal mentorship programs. Policy -makers should invest in the spread of effective team models and alternative payment models. Together, these strategies could broaden the scopes of practice of family physicians and their capacity to deliver accessible and comprehensive care to Canadians.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要