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Two US state-based reports in this issue of JFP focus attention on relationships between primary care physicians and those in other specialties. From California1 the results of a mailed survey show that specialists’ attitudes were mixed regarding primary care physicians as gatekeepers. Approximately half of the responding specialists viewed the involvement of a primary care gatekeeper as a hindrance to their patient care. These attitudes differed significantly, however, depending on the specialists’ practice setting and payment plan. Those physicians who were paid a salary or paid by capitation and those working in larger, more organized practice settings had more favorable views toward the role of gatekeeper. Although this study confirms associations, not causes, it emphasizes the value that medical specialists placed on the gatekeeping role in health care systems structured to control costs. These findings show that specialists’ attitudes toward primary care are sensitive to their perception of risk for loss of referrals and income. This is consistent with anecdotal experiences of large group practices in which responsibility for a condition is viewed as belonging squarely in primary care if a specialty is capitated, but that the condition probably needs a referral if the specialty is paid on a fee-for-service basis.
From Florida,2 an ecologic analysis shows another reason that we should care about the relationships between primary care and other specialties. Assigning patients with colorectal cancer to their county of residence, this careful analysis found that the incidence and mortality of colorectal cancer decreased in Florida counties that had a greater number of primary care physicians (primary care defined as family practice, general practice, obstetrics/gynecology, or general internal medicine). Although this association at a population level may be different at the level of individual patients, the findings are consistent with a large body of established literature about the value of primary care3,4 and its effect on important things like mortality.5-7 The ability of primary care clinicians to provide better screening and earlier diagnoses may explain the association. Strikingly, overall physician supply was not a significant predictor of any of the outcomes examined. The authors rightly conclude that their findings suggest that a balanced work force is probably necessary to achieve the best outcomes.
The call for a balanced approach to the organization of health care services is neither new8 or outdated.9 Given that the United States has many physicians and spends more money than any other country on health care (more $1.3 trillion; almost $300 billion for physician services in 2000)10 for mediocre results (37th in overall health system performance according to the World Health Organization’s ranking of nations),11 it makes sense to look at the mix of physicians and the way they work together—or do not work together—for opportunities to enhance performance.
As of the middle of 2000, the proportion of physicians in primary care (defined here as family practice, general practice, general internal medicine, and general pediatrics) ranged from lows of 27.8% (District of Columbia) and 31.6% (Connecticut) to highs of 42.9% (Alaska) and 41.7% (Iowa), with Florida nestled in the middle at 33.5%.12 This relatively small proportion of primary care physicians is different from other countries, such as the Australia and the United Kingdom, where approximately 44% and 63% of physicians, respectively, are in primary care.13 This is widely believed to be a contributing factor to the relatively poor performance of the health care system of the United States. The paper by Roetzheim and colleagues2 should direct attention to the deployment of a skilled workforce to achieve the primary care function because it matters to people.
Fretting over money should be expected when so much of it is at stake. In 1997 United States primary care physicians reported average annual incomes after expenses, but before taxes, of $156,061 when working an average of 45.4 hours per week.14 This compared with $229,447 for physicians in other specialties providing direct patient care and working an average of 47.6 hours per week. Thus, the income of primary care physicians was approximately 68% as much as other physicians directly caring for patients, while working approximately 95% as many hours. California physicians reported a similar pattern, but net incomes for both primary care and other specialties were approximately 14% less in California than in the United States overall, with a slightly shorter work week in California for both groups.
These statistics are not news, of course, but they provide a context for the views of California physicians reported by Peña-Dolhun and coworkers.1 They suggest how there could be feelings of inequity among primary care physicians and feelings of threat among some hard-working specialists who trained longer than most physicians doing primary care. These income differentials offer an explanation for why students might find primary care practice relatively unrewarding financially. They also show why the public lacks sympathy for physicians squabbling about money.
Using different foci and methods (and coming from both sides of the country) these 2 reports contribute to the growing awareness of the urgent need to redesign medical care and medical education in the United States.15 What will it take to move from our current expensive but inadequate approach that overemphasizes disease-oriented subspecialty medicine to a balanced sustainable patient-centered health care model that optimizes the capacities of an abundant well-trained health care workforce? To answer this question physicians — especially primary care physicians at the frontlines of medicine — will need to work together on behalf of the well-being of the people of the United States.
1. Peña-Dolhun E, Grumbach K, Vranizan K, Osmond D, Bindman AB. Unlocking specialists’ attitudes toward primary care gatekeepers. J Fam Pract 2001;50:1032-1037.
2. Roetzheim RG, Gonzalez EC, Ramirez A, Campbell R, Van Durme DJ. Primary care physician supply and colorectal cancer. J Fam Pract 2001;50:1027-1031.
3. Donaldson MS, Yordy KD, Lohr KN, Vanselow NA. eds. Primary care: America’s health in a new era. Washington, DC: National Academy Press, Institute of Medicine; 1996.
4. Starfield B. Primary care: balancing health needs, services, and technology. New York, NY: Oxford University Press; 1998.
5. Villalbi JR, Guarga A, Pasarin MI, et al. An evaluation of the impact of primary care reform on health. Aten Primaria 1999;24:468-74.
6. Jarman B, Gault S, Alves B, et al. Explaining differences in English hospital death rates using routinely collected data. BMJ 1999;318:1515-20.
7. Shi L, Starfield B, Kennedy BP, Kawachi I. Income inequality, primary care, and health indicators. J Fam Pract 1999;48:275-84.
8. White KL, Williams TF, Greenberg BG. The ecology of medical care. N Engl J Med 1961;265:885-92.
9. Green LA, Fryer EF, Yawn BP, Lanier D, Dovey SM. The ecology of medical care revisited. N Engl J Med 2001;344:2021-25.
10. Heffler S, Levit K, Smith S, Smith C, Cowan C, Lazenby, Freeland M. Health spending growth up in 1999; faster growth expected in the future. Health Aff 2001;20:193-203.
11. Musgrove P, Creese A, Preker A, Baeza C, Anell A, Prentice T. The world health report 2000. Geneva, Switzerland: The World Health Organization; 2000.
12. American Medical Association masterfile, 2000.
13. Starfield B. Primary care: concept, evaluation, and policy. New York, NY: Oxford University Press; 1992.
14. American Medical Association socioeconomic monitoring system core survey 1997
15. Committee on Quality of Health Care in America. Crossing the quality chasm: a new health system for the 21st century. Washington, DC: National Academy Press, Institute of Medicine; 2001.
Two US state-based reports in this issue of JFP focus attention on relationships between primary care physicians and those in other specialties. From California1 the results of a mailed survey show that specialists’ attitudes were mixed regarding primary care physicians as gatekeepers. Approximately half of the responding specialists viewed the involvement of a primary care gatekeeper as a hindrance to their patient care. These attitudes differed significantly, however, depending on the specialists’ practice setting and payment plan. Those physicians who were paid a salary or paid by capitation and those working in larger, more organized practice settings had more favorable views toward the role of gatekeeper. Although this study confirms associations, not causes, it emphasizes the value that medical specialists placed on the gatekeeping role in health care systems structured to control costs. These findings show that specialists’ attitudes toward primary care are sensitive to their perception of risk for loss of referrals and income. This is consistent with anecdotal experiences of large group practices in which responsibility for a condition is viewed as belonging squarely in primary care if a specialty is capitated, but that the condition probably needs a referral if the specialty is paid on a fee-for-service basis.
From Florida,2 an ecologic analysis shows another reason that we should care about the relationships between primary care and other specialties. Assigning patients with colorectal cancer to their county of residence, this careful analysis found that the incidence and mortality of colorectal cancer decreased in Florida counties that had a greater number of primary care physicians (primary care defined as family practice, general practice, obstetrics/gynecology, or general internal medicine). Although this association at a population level may be different at the level of individual patients, the findings are consistent with a large body of established literature about the value of primary care3,4 and its effect on important things like mortality.5-7 The ability of primary care clinicians to provide better screening and earlier diagnoses may explain the association. Strikingly, overall physician supply was not a significant predictor of any of the outcomes examined. The authors rightly conclude that their findings suggest that a balanced work force is probably necessary to achieve the best outcomes.
The call for a balanced approach to the organization of health care services is neither new8 or outdated.9 Given that the United States has many physicians and spends more money than any other country on health care (more $1.3 trillion; almost $300 billion for physician services in 2000)10 for mediocre results (37th in overall health system performance according to the World Health Organization’s ranking of nations),11 it makes sense to look at the mix of physicians and the way they work together—or do not work together—for opportunities to enhance performance.
As of the middle of 2000, the proportion of physicians in primary care (defined here as family practice, general practice, general internal medicine, and general pediatrics) ranged from lows of 27.8% (District of Columbia) and 31.6% (Connecticut) to highs of 42.9% (Alaska) and 41.7% (Iowa), with Florida nestled in the middle at 33.5%.12 This relatively small proportion of primary care physicians is different from other countries, such as the Australia and the United Kingdom, where approximately 44% and 63% of physicians, respectively, are in primary care.13 This is widely believed to be a contributing factor to the relatively poor performance of the health care system of the United States. The paper by Roetzheim and colleagues2 should direct attention to the deployment of a skilled workforce to achieve the primary care function because it matters to people.
Fretting over money should be expected when so much of it is at stake. In 1997 United States primary care physicians reported average annual incomes after expenses, but before taxes, of $156,061 when working an average of 45.4 hours per week.14 This compared with $229,447 for physicians in other specialties providing direct patient care and working an average of 47.6 hours per week. Thus, the income of primary care physicians was approximately 68% as much as other physicians directly caring for patients, while working approximately 95% as many hours. California physicians reported a similar pattern, but net incomes for both primary care and other specialties were approximately 14% less in California than in the United States overall, with a slightly shorter work week in California for both groups.
These statistics are not news, of course, but they provide a context for the views of California physicians reported by Peña-Dolhun and coworkers.1 They suggest how there could be feelings of inequity among primary care physicians and feelings of threat among some hard-working specialists who trained longer than most physicians doing primary care. These income differentials offer an explanation for why students might find primary care practice relatively unrewarding financially. They also show why the public lacks sympathy for physicians squabbling about money.
Using different foci and methods (and coming from both sides of the country) these 2 reports contribute to the growing awareness of the urgent need to redesign medical care and medical education in the United States.15 What will it take to move from our current expensive but inadequate approach that overemphasizes disease-oriented subspecialty medicine to a balanced sustainable patient-centered health care model that optimizes the capacities of an abundant well-trained health care workforce? To answer this question physicians — especially primary care physicians at the frontlines of medicine — will need to work together on behalf of the well-being of the people of the United States.
Two US state-based reports in this issue of JFP focus attention on relationships between primary care physicians and those in other specialties. From California1 the results of a mailed survey show that specialists’ attitudes were mixed regarding primary care physicians as gatekeepers. Approximately half of the responding specialists viewed the involvement of a primary care gatekeeper as a hindrance to their patient care. These attitudes differed significantly, however, depending on the specialists’ practice setting and payment plan. Those physicians who were paid a salary or paid by capitation and those working in larger, more organized practice settings had more favorable views toward the role of gatekeeper. Although this study confirms associations, not causes, it emphasizes the value that medical specialists placed on the gatekeeping role in health care systems structured to control costs. These findings show that specialists’ attitudes toward primary care are sensitive to their perception of risk for loss of referrals and income. This is consistent with anecdotal experiences of large group practices in which responsibility for a condition is viewed as belonging squarely in primary care if a specialty is capitated, but that the condition probably needs a referral if the specialty is paid on a fee-for-service basis.
From Florida,2 an ecologic analysis shows another reason that we should care about the relationships between primary care and other specialties. Assigning patients with colorectal cancer to their county of residence, this careful analysis found that the incidence and mortality of colorectal cancer decreased in Florida counties that had a greater number of primary care physicians (primary care defined as family practice, general practice, obstetrics/gynecology, or general internal medicine). Although this association at a population level may be different at the level of individual patients, the findings are consistent with a large body of established literature about the value of primary care3,4 and its effect on important things like mortality.5-7 The ability of primary care clinicians to provide better screening and earlier diagnoses may explain the association. Strikingly, overall physician supply was not a significant predictor of any of the outcomes examined. The authors rightly conclude that their findings suggest that a balanced work force is probably necessary to achieve the best outcomes.
The call for a balanced approach to the organization of health care services is neither new8 or outdated.9 Given that the United States has many physicians and spends more money than any other country on health care (more $1.3 trillion; almost $300 billion for physician services in 2000)10 for mediocre results (37th in overall health system performance according to the World Health Organization’s ranking of nations),11 it makes sense to look at the mix of physicians and the way they work together—or do not work together—for opportunities to enhance performance.
As of the middle of 2000, the proportion of physicians in primary care (defined here as family practice, general practice, general internal medicine, and general pediatrics) ranged from lows of 27.8% (District of Columbia) and 31.6% (Connecticut) to highs of 42.9% (Alaska) and 41.7% (Iowa), with Florida nestled in the middle at 33.5%.12 This relatively small proportion of primary care physicians is different from other countries, such as the Australia and the United Kingdom, where approximately 44% and 63% of physicians, respectively, are in primary care.13 This is widely believed to be a contributing factor to the relatively poor performance of the health care system of the United States. The paper by Roetzheim and colleagues2 should direct attention to the deployment of a skilled workforce to achieve the primary care function because it matters to people.
Fretting over money should be expected when so much of it is at stake. In 1997 United States primary care physicians reported average annual incomes after expenses, but before taxes, of $156,061 when working an average of 45.4 hours per week.14 This compared with $229,447 for physicians in other specialties providing direct patient care and working an average of 47.6 hours per week. Thus, the income of primary care physicians was approximately 68% as much as other physicians directly caring for patients, while working approximately 95% as many hours. California physicians reported a similar pattern, but net incomes for both primary care and other specialties were approximately 14% less in California than in the United States overall, with a slightly shorter work week in California for both groups.
These statistics are not news, of course, but they provide a context for the views of California physicians reported by Peña-Dolhun and coworkers.1 They suggest how there could be feelings of inequity among primary care physicians and feelings of threat among some hard-working specialists who trained longer than most physicians doing primary care. These income differentials offer an explanation for why students might find primary care practice relatively unrewarding financially. They also show why the public lacks sympathy for physicians squabbling about money.
Using different foci and methods (and coming from both sides of the country) these 2 reports contribute to the growing awareness of the urgent need to redesign medical care and medical education in the United States.15 What will it take to move from our current expensive but inadequate approach that overemphasizes disease-oriented subspecialty medicine to a balanced sustainable patient-centered health care model that optimizes the capacities of an abundant well-trained health care workforce? To answer this question physicians — especially primary care physicians at the frontlines of medicine — will need to work together on behalf of the well-being of the people of the United States.
1. Peña-Dolhun E, Grumbach K, Vranizan K, Osmond D, Bindman AB. Unlocking specialists’ attitudes toward primary care gatekeepers. J Fam Pract 2001;50:1032-1037.
2. Roetzheim RG, Gonzalez EC, Ramirez A, Campbell R, Van Durme DJ. Primary care physician supply and colorectal cancer. J Fam Pract 2001;50:1027-1031.
3. Donaldson MS, Yordy KD, Lohr KN, Vanselow NA. eds. Primary care: America’s health in a new era. Washington, DC: National Academy Press, Institute of Medicine; 1996.
4. Starfield B. Primary care: balancing health needs, services, and technology. New York, NY: Oxford University Press; 1998.
5. Villalbi JR, Guarga A, Pasarin MI, et al. An evaluation of the impact of primary care reform on health. Aten Primaria 1999;24:468-74.
6. Jarman B, Gault S, Alves B, et al. Explaining differences in English hospital death rates using routinely collected data. BMJ 1999;318:1515-20.
7. Shi L, Starfield B, Kennedy BP, Kawachi I. Income inequality, primary care, and health indicators. J Fam Pract 1999;48:275-84.
8. White KL, Williams TF, Greenberg BG. The ecology of medical care. N Engl J Med 1961;265:885-92.
9. Green LA, Fryer EF, Yawn BP, Lanier D, Dovey SM. The ecology of medical care revisited. N Engl J Med 2001;344:2021-25.
10. Heffler S, Levit K, Smith S, Smith C, Cowan C, Lazenby, Freeland M. Health spending growth up in 1999; faster growth expected in the future. Health Aff 2001;20:193-203.
11. Musgrove P, Creese A, Preker A, Baeza C, Anell A, Prentice T. The world health report 2000. Geneva, Switzerland: The World Health Organization; 2000.
12. American Medical Association masterfile, 2000.
13. Starfield B. Primary care: concept, evaluation, and policy. New York, NY: Oxford University Press; 1992.
14. American Medical Association socioeconomic monitoring system core survey 1997
15. Committee on Quality of Health Care in America. Crossing the quality chasm: a new health system for the 21st century. Washington, DC: National Academy Press, Institute of Medicine; 2001.
1. Peña-Dolhun E, Grumbach K, Vranizan K, Osmond D, Bindman AB. Unlocking specialists’ attitudes toward primary care gatekeepers. J Fam Pract 2001;50:1032-1037.
2. Roetzheim RG, Gonzalez EC, Ramirez A, Campbell R, Van Durme DJ. Primary care physician supply and colorectal cancer. J Fam Pract 2001;50:1027-1031.
3. Donaldson MS, Yordy KD, Lohr KN, Vanselow NA. eds. Primary care: America’s health in a new era. Washington, DC: National Academy Press, Institute of Medicine; 1996.
4. Starfield B. Primary care: balancing health needs, services, and technology. New York, NY: Oxford University Press; 1998.
5. Villalbi JR, Guarga A, Pasarin MI, et al. An evaluation of the impact of primary care reform on health. Aten Primaria 1999;24:468-74.
6. Jarman B, Gault S, Alves B, et al. Explaining differences in English hospital death rates using routinely collected data. BMJ 1999;318:1515-20.
7. Shi L, Starfield B, Kennedy BP, Kawachi I. Income inequality, primary care, and health indicators. J Fam Pract 1999;48:275-84.
8. White KL, Williams TF, Greenberg BG. The ecology of medical care. N Engl J Med 1961;265:885-92.
9. Green LA, Fryer EF, Yawn BP, Lanier D, Dovey SM. The ecology of medical care revisited. N Engl J Med 2001;344:2021-25.
10. Heffler S, Levit K, Smith S, Smith C, Cowan C, Lazenby, Freeland M. Health spending growth up in 1999; faster growth expected in the future. Health Aff 2001;20:193-203.
11. Musgrove P, Creese A, Preker A, Baeza C, Anell A, Prentice T. The world health report 2000. Geneva, Switzerland: The World Health Organization; 2000.
12. American Medical Association masterfile, 2000.
13. Starfield B. Primary care: concept, evaluation, and policy. New York, NY: Oxford University Press; 1992.
14. American Medical Association socioeconomic monitoring system core survey 1997
15. Committee on Quality of Health Care in America. Crossing the quality chasm: a new health system for the 21st century. Washington, DC: National Academy Press, Institute of Medicine; 2001.