Australian podiatry workforce: findings from the PAIGE cross-sectional study of Australian podiatrists.

IF 2.5 3区 医学 Q1 ORTHOPEDICS
Anna Couch, Terry Haines, Belinda O'Sullivan, Hylton B Menz, Cylie M Williams
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Background: Understanding the dynamics of the podiatry workforce is essential for the sustainability of the profession. This study aimed to describe the podiatry workforce characteristics and identify factors associated with rural practice location.

Methods: We used an exploratory descriptive design from data obtained during cross sectional study: Podiatrists in Australia: Investigating Graduate Employment through four online surveys (2017-2020). Demographic and workplace characteristics including career development were described. Univariate logistic regressions were used to determine associations with rural or metropolitan practice location.

Results: Data were included from 1, 135 podiatrists (21% of n = 5,429). There were 716 (69% of n = 1,042) females, 724 (65% of n = 1,118) worked in the public health service and 574 (51% of 1,129) were salaried employees. There were 706 (87% of n = 816) podiatrists with access to paid annual leave and 592 (72% of n = 816) to paid sick leave. There were 87 (32% of n = 276) podiatrists who reported 51-75% of workload involved Medicare bulk-billed Chronic Disease Management plans, and 324 (74% of n = 436) not utilising telehealth. The majority of podiatrists (57% of n = 1,048) indicated their average consultation length was 21 -30 min, and patients typically waited < 3 days for an appointment (41% of n = 1,043). Univariate logistic regression identified podiatrists working in metropolitan settings have less years working in current location (OR = 0.98, 95% CI = 0.96, 0.99), less working locations (OR = 0.91, 95% CI = 0.86, 0.97), were less likely to have access to paid annual leave (OR = 0.65, 95% CI = 0.43, 0.98), and paid sick leave (OR = 0.65, 95% CI = 0.46, 0.95), shorter waiting periods for appointments (OR = 0.44, 95% CI 0.30, 0.64) and more likely to utilise telehealth within their practice (OR = 2.03, 95% CI 1.19, 3.50) than those in rural locations.

Conclusion: These results provide insight into the profession uncommonly captured in workforce planning data. This included the number of working locations, billing practices and wait lists. This also highlights opportunities to promote rural training pathways, service integration to build attractive podiatry positions that are tailored to meet the needs of rural communities and solutions to make telehealth more accessible to podiatrists.

澳大利亚足病工作者:来自澳大利亚足病医生的PAIGE横断面研究结果。
背景:了解足部工作人员的动态对专业的可持续性至关重要。本研究旨在描述足部劳动力特征,并确定与农村实践地点相关的因素。方法:我们从横断面研究中获得的数据中使用探索性描述性设计:澳大利亚足病医生:通过四次在线调查(2017-2020)调查毕业生就业。描述了人口统计学和工作场所特征,包括职业发展。使用单变量逻辑回归来确定与农村或大都市实践地点的关系。结果:数据来自1,135名足科医生(n = 5,429的21%)。716人(n = 1,042人中的69%)为女性,724人(n = 1,118人中的65%)在公共卫生服务部门工作,574人(1,129人中的51%)为受薪雇员。706名(87%的n = 816)足科医生享有带薪年假,592名(72%的n = 816)享有带薪病假。有87名(n = 276的32%)足科医生报告说,51-75%的工作量涉及医疗保险批量计费的慢性病管理计划,324名(n = 436的74%)没有利用远程医疗。大多数足科医生(n = 1,048的57%)表示他们的平均咨询时间为21 -30分钟,患者通常等待。结论:这些结果提供了对劳动力规划数据中不常见的职业的见解。这包括工作地点的数量、计费做法和等待名单。这也突出了促进农村培训途径、整合服务以建立适合农村社区需要的有吸引力的足病职位以及解决办法使足病医生更容易获得远程保健的机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
10.30%
发文量
83
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Foot and Ankle Research, the official journal of the Australian Podiatry Association and The College of Podiatry (UK), is an open access journal that encompasses all aspects of policy, organisation, delivery and clinical practice related to the assessment, diagnosis, prevention and management of foot and ankle disorders. Journal of Foot and Ankle Research covers a wide range of clinical subject areas, including diabetology, paediatrics, sports medicine, gerontology and geriatrics, foot surgery, physical therapy, dermatology, wound management, radiology, biomechanics and bioengineering, orthotics and prosthetics, as well the broad areas of epidemiology, policy, organisation and delivery of services related to foot and ankle care. The journal encourages submissions from all health professionals who manage lower limb conditions, including podiatrists, nurses, physical therapists and physiotherapists, orthopaedists, manual therapists, medical specialists and general medical practitioners, as well as health service researchers concerned with foot and ankle care. The Australian Podiatry Association and the College of Podiatry (UK) have reserve funds to cover the article-processing charge for manuscripts submitted by its members. Society members can email the appropriate contact at Australian Podiatry Association or The College of Podiatry to obtain the corresponding code to enter on submission.
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