Analysis of occupational identity among family doctor teams and its influencing factors in Chengdu

Autor: Jinhua CHEN; Mingfeng ZHANG; Yijun WANG; Wen DU; Zhu XIAO; Yuelei WU; Shuyi LIU
Sprache: Englisch; Chinesisch
Veröffentlicht: 2022
Quelle: Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles
Online Zugang: http://www.jeom.org/article/cn/10.11836/JEOM22024
https://doaj.org/toc/2095-9982
2095-9982
doi:10.11836/JEOM22024
https://doaj.org/article/1b5e1c3e17a34ff2baef1717a9d313d4
https://doi.org/10.11836/JEOM22024
https://doaj.org/article/1b5e1c3e17a34ff2baef1717a9d313d4
Erfassungsnummer: ftdoajarticles:oai:doaj.org/article:1b5e1c3e17a34ff2baef1717a9d313d4

Zusammenfassung

BackgroundThe contracted family doctor services are the embodiment of the implementation of the new medical reform policy, and the transformation of the grass-roots health service mode. Studies have proved that the occupational stress in medical staff was at a high level. The enhancement of professional identity will contribute to strengthen team building,alleviate job burnout, and reduce turnover intention of family doctors. ObjectiveTo investigate the current situation of occupational identity among family doctor teams in Chengdu, to examine potential influencing factors of occupational identity, and to provide a reference for promoting career development and team building of family doctor teams. MethodsMulti-stage random cluster sampling was adopted to enroll study participants form 46 primary healthcare centers where family doctor contract services were implemented among 23 districts and counties in Chengdu between March 4 and 26, 2021. A total of 2 681 family doctors participated in this survey. A self-reported survey was conducted to collect participants' demographic and occupational data. The Effort-Reward Imbalance (ERI)questionnaire was implemented to assess occupational stress. The Professional Identity Scale was used to appraise occupational identity. ResultsA total of 2 327 valid questionnaires were collected, with a valid recovery rate of 86.80%, involving 1 715 females (73.7%) and 612 males (26.3%), with dominant age groups of 26−35 years (43.3%) and 36−45 years (30.4%), a high proportion of being married (82.8%), having college (36.0%) and undergraduate (47.3%) education, a high proportion of primary titles (66.0%) and informal work contract (66.1%). About 88.7% of family doctor team workers reported occupational stress. The average score of occupational identity was (3.68±0.62) points. There were significant differences in occupational identity scores among different professional title, work contract, working years in medical institutions, income, and effort/reward ratio (EER) groups (P < ...