Objectives. The objective of this project was to ascertain and quantify the effects of gender, age, payment method, and practice size on clinical output of GP/FPs. While the identification of these effects has been undertaken previously, this study is the first attempt to quantify the proportion of variance in physician output explained by this group of variables.Background. The question is of vital importance to academics, health professionals, and citizens. The physician population is aging and feminizing while physicians are softening their opposition to fixed remuneration methods and displaying a greater predilection to group practice. Implications exist for the supply of physician services as gender, age, payment method, and practi...
Objective The study examines the relationship between the primary care model that a physician belon...
In any fee-for-service system, doctors may be encouraged to increase the number of services (private...
Background: There is widespread, unexplained variation in activity and outcome between general pract...
Objectives. The objective of this project was to ascertain and quantify the effects of gender, age,...
The literature indicates that certain factors may influence the rate at which medical services and t...
This paper employs cohort analysis to examine the relative importance of different factors in explai...
There is widespread sentiment that British Columbia (BC) is facing a substantial shortage and a mald...
grantor: University of TorontoResearch studies have repeatedly demonstrated a gap between ...
BACKGROUND Research on individual general practitioner (GP) workload, e.g. in terms of consultati...
This paper examines the factors affecting the number of patient visits per week reported by family p...
This paper employs a cohort analysis to examine the relative importance of different factors in expl...
This paper employs a cohort analysis to examine the relative importance of different factors in expl...
Research has shown that female physicians continue to earn less than their male counterparts. From b...
Projection of the future supply of physician services has attracted considerable attention all over...
Background: Providing support for research is one of the key issues in the ongoing attempts to impro...
Objective The study examines the relationship between the primary care model that a physician belon...
In any fee-for-service system, doctors may be encouraged to increase the number of services (private...
Background: There is widespread, unexplained variation in activity and outcome between general pract...
Objectives. The objective of this project was to ascertain and quantify the effects of gender, age,...
The literature indicates that certain factors may influence the rate at which medical services and t...
This paper employs cohort analysis to examine the relative importance of different factors in explai...
There is widespread sentiment that British Columbia (BC) is facing a substantial shortage and a mald...
grantor: University of TorontoResearch studies have repeatedly demonstrated a gap between ...
BACKGROUND Research on individual general practitioner (GP) workload, e.g. in terms of consultati...
This paper examines the factors affecting the number of patient visits per week reported by family p...
This paper employs a cohort analysis to examine the relative importance of different factors in expl...
This paper employs a cohort analysis to examine the relative importance of different factors in expl...
Research has shown that female physicians continue to earn less than their male counterparts. From b...
Projection of the future supply of physician services has attracted considerable attention all over...
Background: Providing support for research is one of the key issues in the ongoing attempts to impro...
Objective The study examines the relationship between the primary care model that a physician belon...
In any fee-for-service system, doctors may be encouraged to increase the number of services (private...
Background: There is widespread, unexplained variation in activity and outcome between general pract...