Artículo de revista
Evaluación de la experiencia de participantes en estrategia de dotación de médicos generales en zonas rurales
Fecha
2016Autor
Ramírez, Jorge
Rivera, Pablo
Becerra, Carlos
Peña, Sebastián
Arteaga Herrera, Óscar
Institución
Resumen
Background: Rural areas have scarce medical resources. Initiatives to address
this situation in Latin America exist, but have been poorly evaluated. The Chilean
Rural Practitioner Program, a policy of recruitment and retention of physicians
in rural areas, has been stable over time. Aim: To examine how physicians who
participate in this program evaluate it. Material and Methods: Nationally
representative cross sectional study. Physicians were chosen to respond online or
by telephone a specially designed questionnaire about the Program. Results: 202
participants answered (response rate of 60%). The overall experience was evaluated
with 5.75 points (in a 1 to 7 scale). Participants gave the best scores to climatic
conditions and economic income, and rated infrastructure, human resources
and workload the worst. The evaluation of social relationships at the destination
place was the only condition associated significantly with the overall assessment
of the experience. Seventy percent of physicians would return to the destination
place as a specialist. The value given to social relations and infrastructure were
associated positively with this potential return. Conclusions: Overall, the experience
was positively evaluated. This study provides information to improve
retention policies for human resources for health care in rural areas.