Recruiting Canadian Family Physicians One Research Paper

PAGES
10
WORDS
2633
Cite

People from a given region are more likely than others to be aware of the specific cultural and social systems already in play in any given community and are more aware of what might need to be changed in any given system. (Rourke, 2005) the U.S. has had some success in recruitment and retention programs similar to the recommended actions of the Calgary example above and utilizing some of the recommendations of Rourke and others regarding recruitment from rural areas and retention through support and incentive, but again like Canada progress is short and limited. (Rabinowitz, Diamond, Markham, & Hazelwood, 1999) Rabinowitz, Diamond, Markham, & Hazelwood actually offer a significant model example of a recruitment program at a university in Pennsylvania, where they have slowly but surely been able to influence the numbers or recruited and retained family physicians in the immediate surrounding rural area to the university program. (1999) Yet, all this marginal success begs the question that the recommended idea of recruiting already practicing physicians with experience and confidence is also not a viable solution. It is clear that every complicated problem requires multiple solutions. In the Calgary residency program, mentioned above even those individuals recruited from and doing practicum in rural areas often chose not to settle in urban areas in the short and long run as they perceived medical support as limited in those areas and sought greater skill set learning opportunities and then often chose to stay for family and financial reasons. (Lu, Hakes, Bai, Tolhurst, & Dickinson, 2008) the institutions that are seeking to help solve these problems with recruitment might consider that the population they might be successful with is the existing physician population, rather than new recruits. The recruitment might be more challenging, as these are not students present at clinical every day, but it might also be pointed out that physicians who have been practicing longer might have more resources to relocate, might have more fundamental desire to make a lifestyle change and most importantly may feel as if they are supported by experience and the already strong network they have developed as physicians in urban areas. This paradigm shift might make the possibility of solving this problem, in part more logical as one of the biggest reasons new physicians site for not choosing rural practice is perceived lack of medical support. Whereas older physicians may feel confident in their practicum skills and feel comfortable using remote or tele-networking to obtain advice and treatment support from already established colleagues. (Grumbach, Vranizan, & Bindman, 1997)

Summary

The development of and strengthening of programs associated with improving the recruitment and retention of physicians in rural Canada is absolutely essential to the development of a system that has an ideal more in line with its reality. The recommendations that are found within the literature and are supported by experiential data within it offer a host of recommendations that could go a long way in improving the situation of health care access in rural Canada. Given that 20-38% of the population resides in rural areas the need to provide equitable care...

...

In addition I added a secondary recruitment strategy that will allow recruitment of already practicing physicians who may be at an advantage financially, socially and practically to enter into a contracted engagement in a rural area. Like many of the authors here the use of strategies that both improve the situation on the educational level and improve the recruitment strategies private recruiters might use to bring care providers to rural areas are important to a long-term solution for this enduring problem.
Resources

Curran, V., & Rourke, J. (2004). The role of medical education in the recruitment and retention of rural physicians. Medical Teacher, 26 (3), 265-272.

Easterbrook, M., Godwin, M., Wilson, R., Hodgetts, G., Brown, G., Pong, R., et al. (1999). Rural background and clinical rural rotations during medical training: effect on practice location. Canadian Medical Association Journal, 160 (8), 1159-1163.

Grumbach, K., Vranizan, K., & Bindman, a.B. (1997). Physician Supply AndAccess to Care in Urban Communities. Health Affairs, 16 (1), 71-86.

Hutchison, B., Abelson, J., & Lavis, J. (2001). Primary Care in Canada: So Much Innovation, So Little Change. Primary Care, 20 (3), 116-131.

Jutzi, L., Vogt, K., Drever, E., & Nisker, J. (2009). Recruiting medical students to rural practice: Perspectives of medical students and rural recruiters. Canadian Family Physician, 55, 72-73.e4.

Lu, D.J., Hakes, J., Bai, M., Tolhurst, H., & Dickinson, J.A. (2008). Rural intentions: Factors affecting the career choices of family medicine graduates. Canadian Family Physician, 54, 1016-1017.e5.

Nagarajan, K.V. (2004). Rural and remote community health care in Canada: beyond the Kirby Panel Report, the Romanow Report and the federal budget of 2003. Canadian Journal of Rural Medicine, 9 (4), 245-251.

Rabinowitz, H.K., Diamond, J.J., Markham, F.W., & Hazelwood, C.E. (1999). A Program to Increase the Number of Family Physicians in Rural and Underserved Areas Impact After 22 Years. Journal of American Medicine, 281 (3), 255-260.

Reid, R.J., Roos, N.P., MacWilliam, L., Frohlich, N., & Black, C. (2002). Assessing Population Health Care Need Using a Claims-based ACG Morbidity Measure: A Validation Analysis in the Province of Manitoba. Health Services Research, 13 (5), 1345-1365.

Rourke, J.T. (2005). Strategies to increase the enrolment of students of rural origin in medical school: recommendations from the Society of Rural Physicians of Canada. Canadian Medical Association Journal, 172…

Sources Used in Documents:

Resources

Curran, V., & Rourke, J. (2004). The role of medical education in the recruitment and retention of rural physicians. Medical Teacher, 26 (3), 265-272.

Easterbrook, M., Godwin, M., Wilson, R., Hodgetts, G., Brown, G., Pong, R., et al. (1999). Rural background and clinical rural rotations during medical training: effect on practice location. Canadian Medical Association Journal, 160 (8), 1159-1163.

Grumbach, K., Vranizan, K., & Bindman, a.B. (1997). Physician Supply AndAccess to Care in Urban Communities. Health Affairs, 16 (1), 71-86.

Hutchison, B., Abelson, J., & Lavis, J. (2001). Primary Care in Canada: So Much Innovation, So Little Change. Primary Care, 20 (3), 116-131.


Cite this Document:

"Recruiting Canadian Family Physicians One" (2010, February 28) Retrieved April 26, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/recruiting-canadian-family-physicians-one-194

"Recruiting Canadian Family Physicians One" 28 February 2010. Web.26 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/recruiting-canadian-family-physicians-one-194>

"Recruiting Canadian Family Physicians One", 28 February 2010, Accessed.26 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/recruiting-canadian-family-physicians-one-194

Related Documents
Managed Care
PAGES 44 WORDS 11398

Nursing Tasks, Methods, And Expectations State of the Industry The Art and Science of Nursing Relative Pay Scales Male Nursing Roles Sex Stereotypes The Influence of the Nationalized Healthcare Debate Proposed Methods toward Recruiting Nurses Joint Corporate Campaigns Steps to Recruiting Men Wages issues Recent employment trends in the nursing field have demonstrated a disconcerting drop in the number of employed and employable nurses. In what has been traditionally a female dominated filed, the exit rate of both men and women,

Legislation Pertaining to Foreign Nurses Practicing in the United States Discuss the process that this legislation will go through, referencing the steps to the legislative and administrative process The Rural and Urban Health Care Act of 2001 (S 1259 and HR 2705) dramatically expanded the existing H-1C temporary nursing visa program established in 1999. Before, there were only three ways that foreign-educated nurses could get permission to enter the United States to

Prevalence of Depression in Massachusetts Prospectus: Depression Among Older Immigrant African Women in Metro West Massachusetts Abstract In West Massachusetts United States, the most common health disorders are anxiety and depression. These health disorders are prevalent in elderly immigrant women aged between 50 and 79 years (Agbemenu, 2016). Despite a variety of efficacious interventions for depression and anxiety, elderly immigrant women experience mental health care disparities in their access to mental health services

Cnos: Proposed Study
PAGES 21 WORDS 6509

civilians think of the nursing department in any well-run hospital, they often don't consider all the structure, organization and guidance which is required to make this department run as smoothly as it needs to be and to achieve the highest level of patient-centered goals. One position at the top of the pyramid of the nursing department is the position of Chief Nursing Officer or CNO. The Chief Nursing Officer

Market Orientation of Medical Diagnostic Units Dissertation for Master of Health Administration i. Introduction ii. Objectives iii. Description iv Administrative Internship v. Scope and Approach vi. Growth vii. Methodology viii. Hypothesis ix. Survey Questionnaire x. Research Design xi. Observation and Data Presentation xii. Test provided xiii. Analysis of findings Marketability of Patient Satisfaction Importance of Employee Satisfaction xiv. Conclusions and Recommendations xv. Bibliography xvi. Notes xvii. Appendices Market Orientation of Medical Diagnostic Units

In particular, the attorneys working on this issue claim that the VA is "structurally unsuitable" for dealing with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) which is "a signature problem" veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars are suffering from (Weinstein). Symptoms of PTSD include: "…intense anxiety, persistent nightmares, depression, uncontrollable anger, and difficulties coping with work, family, and social relationships" (Weinstein). There an estimated 1.6 million men and women who have served