Journal article

How do rural GPs' workloads and work activities differ with community size compared with metropolitan practice?

MR McGrail, JS Humphreys, CM Joyce, A Scott, G Kalb

Australian Journal of Primary Health | CSIRO PUBLISHING | Published : 2012

Abstract

Rural communities continue to experience shortages of doctors, placing increased work demands on the existing rural medical workforce. This paper investigates patterns of geographical variation in the workload and work activities of GPs by community size. Our data comes from wave 1 of the Medicine in Australia: Balancing Employment and Life longitudinal study, a national study of Australian doctors. Self-reported hours worked per usual week across eight workplace settings and on-call/ after-hours workload per usual week were analysed against seven community size categories. Our results showed that a GP's total hours worked per week consistently increases as community size decreases, ranging ..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council Health Services Research Grant


Funding Acknowledgements

This work, part of the MABEL study, was supported by a National Health and Medical Research Council Health Services Research Grant (454799) and by the Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing. The views in this paper are ours alone. Thanks to the other members of the MABEL team for their support and input, and a special thank you to the doctors who gave their valuable time to participate in MABEL.