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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 4, 2001
Anecdotes abound
about the tumultuous state of physician affairs in California. However,
there is no objective evidence that large numbers of doctors are
leaving California, according to a report released by the UCSF Center
for Health Professions.
In fact, the ratio
of physicians to population has increased from 177 doctors for every
100,000 people in 1994 to 190 per 100,000 in 2000. This is above
the requirement set forth by the Council on Graduate Medical Education
(COGME), according to the report titled The Practice of Medicine
in California: A Profile of the Physician Workforce, the third in
a series released by the UCSF Center for Health Professions' California
Workforce Initiative.
The report's findings refute the following:
- California now has too many primary care physicians
and not enough specialists.
- Doctors are leaving major urban centers in California.
- Doctors are shunning managed care and finding plenty
of patients without needing to contract with managed care plans.
- Physicians' earnings are plummeting.
The study finds that in 2000, slightly more than one third of California's
active, patient-care physicians practiced in the generalist fields
of medicine (family practice, general practice, general internal
medicine, and general pediatrics). "Although California still
has many more specialists than generalists, the growth of specialists
was slightly slower in recent years relative to the growth of generalists,"
said Kevin Grumbach, MD, UCSF associate professor of family and
community medicine and co-principal investigator on the study. "The
data indicate that public policy and the managed care environment
in California may have had a modest effect on slowing the rate of
growth of specialists relative to the rate of growth for generalists.
However, the magnitude of this effect falls well short of the suggested
mass exodus of specialists in California."
The UCSF investigators also noted that despite the highly competitive
environment in densely populated areas such as San Francisco and
Los Angeles, physicians have not migrated to less competitive, lower
supply regions in California in sufficient numbers to change significantly
the distribution that already exists in the state. Much of the Central
Valley and eastern portions of the state still have ratios of physicians
to population below recommended minimum requirements, despite the
overall abundance of physicians in California.
Contrary to anecdotal reports, most physicians are not shunning
managed care, according to the investigators. In 1998, about half
of generalists and one-third of specialists in urban California
had the majority of their patients enrolled in HMOs (including private,
Medicare, and Medi-Cal HMOs). And in 1998, only sixteen percent
of generalists and 20 percent of specialists had no HMO patients
in their practice.
However, physicians clearly are experiencing many stresses in the
current managed care environment, including perceived pressures
to see more patients per day and to limit medical tests and specialist
referrals, said Grumbach.
"The tenor of media and trade publication articles suggest
a high level of anxiety among California doctors in a managed care
environment where some perceive physicians to be working more and
making less," said O'Neil. "Although managed care may
be dampening the rate of increase of physician incomes, especially
for specialists, California physicians have median incomes ranging
from $120,000 to $250,000. These are comparable to those reported
for physicians nationwide and well above $33,000, the mean income
for California."
The report also includes a synopsis of demographic and medical
training data:
- Most California physicians are male and white --
with the largest group comprised of physicians between ages 45
and 54.
- The physician workforce is slowly but steadily
approaching parity between the numbers of female and male physicians.
California is on par with national estimates that women will constitute
more than a third of active physicians in the U.S. in 2020.
- Women physicians are more likely than men to choose
primary care specialties and obstetrics and gynecology.
- The state's physician workforce is losing ground
in terms of its racial and ethnic diversity. African Americans
and Hispanic/Latinos each comprised less than 5 percent of the
state's physicians, although they made up 7 and 31 percent of
the state's population respectively. Medical education pipelines
do not show significant advances in recent years in racial and
ethnic diversity.
- Only about a quarter of physicians practicing in
California in 2000 attended medical school in the state. About
50 percent of the state's physicians attended school in another
U.S. state and the remaining 25 percent attended school outside
the U.S.
- A slight majority (55 percent) of the physicians
practicing in California in 2000 did their residency training
in the state. The remaining 45 percent completed their residencies
outside California.
The report was made possible through the support of the California
HealthCare Foundation which, in partnership with The California
Endowment, funds the California Workforce Initiative.
The California HealthCare Foundation is an Oakland-based, independent
non-profit philanthropic organization whose mission is to expand
access for underserved individuals and communities, and to promote
fundamental improvements in health status of the people of California.
The California Endowment is a private foundation with staff throughout
the state whose grants are made to organizations and institutions
that directly benefit the well being of Californians.
Additional support for research activities contributing to this
report came from the Bureau of Health Professions, Health Resource
and Services Administration; the Agency for Health Care Research
and Quality; and the California Program on Access to Care, California
Policy and Research Center.
The California Workforce Initiative will be conducting a survey
of physicians in the state during 2001. For more information, visit
www.futurehealth.ucsf.edu
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