Abstract
Introduction: Medical workforce shortages in
Australia have led to increasing reliance on overseas-
trained doctors (OTDs) to work in general
practice in areas of need, particularly in rural
areas. These OTDs do not have Australian postgraduate
training in general practice, and we know
little about how they practise.
Objective: To determine differences in practice
style between a self-selected group of overseastrained
general practitioners undertaking the
Alternative Pathways Program and GPs who are
Fellows of the Royal Australian College of General
Practitioners (FRACGP), and whether such differences
can be explained by other practitioner,
practice and patient characteristics.
Method: A self-selected sample of 89 OTDs from
the Alternative Pathways Program were compared
with FRACGPs in a continuous national study of
GP activity (n = 1032). Each GP provided details
about themselves and their practice and recorded
data about patients, morbidity and treatments for
100 encounters.
Results: OTDs were younger, less experienced,
worked more sessions per week, in smaller practices.
OTDs saw fewer children and elderly
patients, more new patients, health concession
card holders and Indigenous people. OTDs managed
less general, urological, social, skin and
pregnancy problems, and more cardiovascular
problems, urinary tract infections, tonsillitis and
conjunctivitis. They provided more medications,
other treatments and referrals, and ordered more
pathology and imaging tests.
Conclusion: This study suggests that OTDs see
a different patient mix and range of morbidity and
provide different management to that of
FRACGPs, generating higher costs of care. Regular
study of the clinical activities of a representative sample of overseas-trained GPs is needed.
Cited by
6 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献