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Dimensions of retention: a national study of the locational histories of physician assistants

This study describes the locational histories of a representative national sample of physician assistants and considers the implications of observed locational behavior for recruitment and retention of physician assistants in rural practice. Through a survey, physician assistants listed all the plac...

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Published in:The Journal of rural health 1999-09, Vol.15 (4), p.391-402
Main Authors: Larson, E.H, Hart, L.G, Goodwin, M.K, Geller, J, Andrilla, C
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Language:English
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c4321-f75b5ef8d2d3fd6aa95669cd8d08fc0bed0bae3d22f4402f556f2f06c6c1a9203
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container_end_page 402
container_issue 4
container_start_page 391
container_title The Journal of rural health
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creator Larson, E.H
Hart, L.G
Goodwin, M.K
Geller, J
Andrilla, C
description This study describes the locational histories of a representative national sample of physician assistants and considers the implications of observed locational behavior for recruitment and retention of physician assistants in rural practice. Through a survey, physician assistants listed all the places they had practiced since completing their physician assistant training, making it possible to classify the career histories of physician assistants as "all rural," "all urban," "urban to rural" or "rural to urban." The study examined the retention of physician assistants in rural practice at several levels: in the first practice, in rural practice overall and in states. Physician assistants who started their careers in rural locations were more likely to leave them during the first four years of practice than urban physician assistants, and female rural physician assistants were slightly more likely to leave than men. Those starting in rural practice had high attrition to urban areas (41 percent); however, a significant proportion of the physician assistants who started in urban practice settings left for rural settings (10 percent). This kept the total proportion of physician assistants in rural practice at a steady 20 percent. While 21 percent of the earliest graduates of physician assistant training programs have had exclusively rural careers, only 9 percent of physician assistants with four to seven years of experience have worked exclusively in rural settings. At the state level, generalist physician assistants were significantly more likely to leave states with practice environments unfavorable to physician assistant practice in terms of prescriptive authority, reimbursement and insurance.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1748-0361.1999.tb00762.x
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identifier ISSN: 0890-765X
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1748-0361
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source Wiley-Blackwell Read & Publish Collection
subjects Adult
Career Mobility
demography
employment
Female
health care workers
Humans
location theory
Male
Personnel Selection - methods
Personnel Selection - statistics & numerical data
Personnel Turnover - statistics & numerical data
Physician Assistants - psychology
Physician Assistants - statistics & numerical data
Physician Assistants - supply & distribution
Professional Practice Location - statistics & numerical data
rural areas
Rural Health Services - manpower
Surveys and Questionnaires
United States
urban areas
Urban Health Services - manpower
title Dimensions of retention: a national study of the locational histories of physician assistants
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