Imbalance between demand for and supply of physicians is an issue regularly addressed by the media, researchers and policy makers. It has been widely spread in many countries for years. Healthcare organizations in both of developed and developing countries have all experienced from that. Physician to patient ratio is one of the important normative population based indicators to measure this imbalance. It equals to the entire number of physicians in a healthcare organization dividing its patient volume within a certain period (e.g., a year). The
quotient is often standardized in form of X (number of physicians) per 1,000 patients, or in form of ''1:X'' in order to express the amount of patients (X) that under one physician's management clearly. In comparison with other measurements, this kind of indicators are less complicated and easier to
comprehend. An imbalance between physician demand and supply in a healthcare organization could be explicitly identified and quantified by comparing its actual physician to patient ratio with a ''gold standard''. Unfortunately, a wide-range
suitable gold standard of physician to patient ratio does not exist. Therefore, healthcare organizations must make great efforts to find their own gold standards. The physician to patient ratio could be easily confounded with the patient to
physician ratio which represents the number of physicians, who oversee one patient within his or her entire hospital stay. In an ideal model for patient care is ''1:1'' the target patient to physician ratio to aim at. But in reality, this ratio is not
easy to realize. In this paper, merely the physician to patient ratio is under discussion.
Imbalance between demand for and supply of physicians could bring inappropriate physician to patient ratio to healthcare organizations. It is one of the major threats to healthcare organizations, as it might have consequences such as lower quality of healthcare services, closure of hospital's ward, increasing wait time, reducing number of staff beds, under-utilization of physicians or higher medical costs. Managing the physician to patient ratio is not only a key to predict these risks but also the hope for turning the imbalance situations into balance ones. [...]
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
2. Consequences of physician to patient ratio in healthcare organizations
2.1 Outcomes of appropriate physician to patient ratio
2.2 Outcomes of inappropriate physician to patient ratio
2.2.1 Outcomes of lower than appropriate physician to patient ratio
2.2.2 Outcomes of higher than appropriate physician to patient ratio
3. Factors affecting physician to patients ratio
3.1 Determinants of physician demand
3.1.1 Determinants of physician demand in system level
3.1.2 Determinants of physician demand in managerial level
3.2 Determinants of physician supply
3.2.1 Determinants of physician supply in system level
3.2.2 Determinants of physician supply in managerial level
4. Management of physician to patient ratio in healthcare organizations
4.1 Direct management methodology
4.1.1 Defining the current panel size
4.1.2 Determining the ideal panel size
4.1.3 Adjusting for age and gender
4.1.4 Adjusting for practice style
4.1.5 Ways to make improvements
4.2 Indirect management Methodology
4.2.1 Generating the physician to patient ratio
4.2.1.1 Configuring the appropriate staffing level
4.2.1.2 Defining the current physician supply and demand
4.2.1.3 Improving the physician supply
4.2.2 Ways to improve the physician to patient ratio
5. Summary
6. Reference
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