伯恩斯住院医生的工作条件比以往任何时候都好?

IF 1 Q4 CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE
Grant Coleman, Toby Austin, James F Forrest, Sarah E Bache
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在过去的50年里,住院医生(或“初级”)的工作和生活发生了巨大的变化。对历史上的工作条件的描述通常是轶事式的,带有怀旧色彩,但今天的烧伤和整形医生认为工作条件在过去50年里是改善了还是下降了,这对招聘和保留医生有影响吗?方法:对一位退休的外科医生进行了访谈,他于1970年在烧伤外科先驱道格拉斯·麦格雷戈·杰克逊先生的烧伤病房担任家庭外科医生(相当于第二年医生)。这与文献综述相结合,客观地评估医生在那个时期的工作条件。由此产生的信息制作了一张海报,总结了这些时期之间的主要区别。向目前的医疗工作人员提出了这一建议,并进行了一项调查,以确定他们对工作条件的偏好。结果:共有68名不同等级、不同背景的医生完成问卷调查。大多数受访者(60%)会选择在今天的烧伤中心工作。1970年(37岁)和今天(31岁)受访者对工作条件偏好的平均年龄有显著差异(p = 0.035)。结论:烧伤患者的工作条件和管理发生了多种变化。大多数被问及的人认为今天的工作条件比过去好。然而,更多的资深临床医生倾向于更喜欢1970年的条件,而不是现在,这表明意见的代际转变。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Working Conditions for Burns Resident Doctors-Better Now than Ever?

Background: The work and life of a resident (or "junior") doctor has changed dramatically over the past 50 years. Descriptions of historic working conditions are usually anecdotal and tinted with nostalgia, but do today's burns and plastic surgery doctors feel working conditions have improved or declined over the last 50 years, and does this have an impact on recruitment and retention?

Methods: An interview was conducted with a retired surgeon who, in 1970, worked as a house surgeon (Year 2 doctor equivalent) in a burns unit for the pioneering burn surgeon Mr. Douglas MacGregor Jackson. This was coupled with a literature review to objectively assess working conditions in that period for doctors. The information generated from this produced a poster summarizing the key differences between these periods. This was presented to the current medical work force, and a survey was conducted to determine their preferences for working conditions.

Results: The questionnaire was completed by 68 doctors of mixed grades and backgrounds. The majority of respondents (60%) would choose to work in today's burns centres. There was a significant difference between the mean age of respondents' preference of working conditions in 1970 (37 years) and those preferring today (31 years) (p = 0.035).

Conclusions: Multiple changes in the working conditions and the management of burns patients were identified. The majority of those who were asked consider today's working conditions to be better than those of the past. However, more senior clinicians tended to prefer the conditions of 1970 over the present day, suggesting a generational shift in opinion.

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