Job Satisfaction at All Time Low for Primary Care Doctors

by Emilio Lizardo | November 18, 2008 at 10:35 am
104 views | 32 Recommendations | 4 comments

Photos

Job Satisfaction at All Time Low for Primary Care Doctors

Job Satisfaction at All Time Low for Primary Care Doctors

see larger image

uploaded by Emilio Lizardo

The suprising results of a national survey of primary health care physicians indicate that nearly half of current front-line health care providers feel they would be happier doing something else.

What would Marcus Welby say to that ?

Half of primary-care doctors in survey would leave medicine

Nearly half the respondents in a survey of U.S. primary care physicians said that they would seriously consider getting out of the medical business within the next three years if they had an alternative.

The survey, released this week by the Physicians' Foundation, which promotes better doctor-patient relationships, sought to find the reasons for an identified exodus among family doctors and internists, widely known as the backbone of the health industry.

A U.S. shortage of 35,000 to 40,000 primary care physicians by 2025 was predicted at last week's American Medical Association annual meeting.

In the survey, the foundation sent questionnaires to more than 270,000 primary care doctors and more than 50,000 specialists nationwide.

Of the 12,000 respondents, 49 percent said they'd consider leaving medicine. Many said they are overwhelmed with their practices, not because they have too many patients, but because there's too much red tape generated from insurance companies and government agencies.

recommend This comment thread is now closed
0
Terri Potratz

I think the fact that doctors want to quit because of red tape and insurance complications, not because of the other aspects of their job, is a key point to this story.

0
Blue Crush

Over a third of the physicians surveyed say they have closed their practice to Medicaid patients, that sounds like over a third too many to me.  Hopefully the Obama administration can help eliminate the problem of too much paperwork and red tape.

0
Amy Judd

This is terrible because we need these people the most really.

0
Emilio Lizardo

Thanks for comments and recommendations, all !

Clearly, some kind of change for the better is needed in America's failed health care system.

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

What is NowPublic?

NowPublic lets people work together to cover news events around the world.

Find out more

Crowd Power

Terri Potratz
First Flagged at 1:04 PM, Nov 18, 2008 by Terri Potratz
These members have powered this story:

Most Recommended Stories in Health

Recommendations (32)

Most recently recommended by:
 

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from