Title of article :
U.S. medical studentsʹ attitudes about patientsʹ access to care
Author/Authors :
Erica Frank، نويسنده , , Surbhi Modi، نويسنده , , Lisa Elon، نويسنده , , Steven S. Coughlin، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
Objective
Accessing adequate medical services remains a major struggle for many Americans, but U.S. medical studentsʹ beliefs regarding access to care have not been thoroughly examined.
Methods
All medical students in the Class of 2003 at 16 U.S. schools were eligible to complete three questionnaires during their medical training: during freshman orientation, orientation to wards, and their senior year (n = 2316, response rate = 80.3%). Students responded to three questions about health care provision.
Results
Overall, 35% of students strongly agreed that “physicians have a responsibility to take care of patients regardless of their ability to pay;” only 5% disagreed. Only 8% disagreed that “access to basic health care is a fundamental human right.” We found the same significant associations with opinions on access as we did with “responsibility to treat,” although the associations tended to be stronger for access. Only 10% of students agreed that “Managed care, as it is now delivered, is a good way to deliver health care to the U.S. population.”
Conclusion
Most U.S. medical students support universal access to medical care, though variations in this support, its decline with additional years of medical education, and concerns about managed care are noteworthy, and have policy implications for Americaʹs health and health care workforce.
Keywords :
physicians , Universal access , Managed care , Access to care , Medical students
Journal title :
Preventive Medicine
Journal title :
Preventive Medicine