Rural Versus Urban Family Medicine Residency Scope of Training and Practice

Author:

Pollack Samantha W.1,Andrilla C. Holly A.1,Peterson Lars23,Morgan Zachary J.2,Longenecker Randall4,Schmitz David5,Evans David V.1,Patterson Davis G.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Family Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA

2. American Board of Family Medicine, Lexington, KY

3. Family and Community Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY

4. Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine, Athens, OH

5. Department of Family and Community Medicine, School of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of North Dakota, Grand Forks, ND

Abstract

Background and Objectives: Little is known about how rural and urban family medicine residencies compare in preparing physicians for practice. This study compared the perceptions of preparation for practice and actual postgraduation scope of practice (SOP) between rural and urban residency program graduates. Methods: We analyzed data on 6,483 early-career, board-certified physicians surveyed 2016-2018, 3 years after residency graduation, and 44,325 later-career board-certified physicians surveyed 2014-2018, every 7 to 10 years after initial certification. Bivariate comparisons and multivariate regressions of rural and urban residency graduates examined perceived preparedness and current practice in 30 areas and overall SOP using a validated scale, with separate models for early-career and later-career physicians. Results: In bivariate analyses, rural program graduates were more likely than urban program graduates to report being prepared for hospital-based care, casting, cardiac stress tests, and other skills, but less likely to be prepared in some gynecologic care and pharmacologic HIV/AIDS management. Both early- and later-career rural program graduates reported broader overall SOPs than their urban-program counterparts in bivariate analyses; in adjusted analyses this difference remained significant only for later-career physicians. Conclusions: Compared with urban program graduates, rural graduates more often rated themselves prepared in several hospital care measures and less often in certain women’s health measures. Controlling for multiple characteristics, only rurally trained, later-career physicians reported a broader SOP than their urban program counterparts. This study demonstrates the value of rural training and provides a baseline for research exploring longitudinal benefits of this training to rural communities and population health.

Publisher

Society of Teachers of Family Medicine

Subject

Family Practice

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