TY - JOUR
T1 - Large-Scale Observational Study on the Current Status and Challenges of General Medicine in Japan
T2 - Job Description and Required Skills
AU - Miyagami, Taiju
AU - Yamada, Toru
AU - Kanzawa, Yohei
AU - Kosugi, Shunsuke
AU - Nagasaki, Kazuya
AU - Nagano, Hiroyuki
AU - Shimizu, Taro
AU - Fujibayashi, Kazutoshi
AU - Deshpande, Gautam A.
AU - Naito, Toshio
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Miyagami et al.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Purpose: To identify the current ambiguous status of general medicine (GM) and assess current problems and weaknesses for further development of GM. Patients and Methods: This study adopted an observational design. GM practitioners were selected from the mailing lists of two primary professional associations for Japanese GM doctors. We included physicians currently working in a GM department, those selfdescribed as GM doctors, and those board-certified in family medicine or general internal medicine. Respondents replied to survey questions about their sociodemographic data, job descriptions, and the requisite skills for practice. GM doctors’ job description and required skills were categorized into “clinical,” “management,” “education,” and “research.” Participants (n = 971) were compared based on job descriptions and important skills in each category by facility type, size, and position. Results: “Clinical” was indicated as the most important category for both job description and important skills, followed by “management,” “education,” and “research.” For job description details, “follow-up outpatient” (35.6%) ranked first for “clinical,” and “resident education” (57.3%) ranked first for “education.” By facility type and size, job description and important skills decreased for clinical and management categories as facility sizes increased; the opposite was true for “education.” “Research” was generally rated low. By position, no significant difference was found in effort or importance given to research. Conclusion: This study is the first survey on GM physicians across Japan. The results show that while Japanese GM physicians focus on and place importance on clinical practice, they are less involved in research and do not consider research skills to be important. The challenge for the future development of GM lies in research.
AB - Purpose: To identify the current ambiguous status of general medicine (GM) and assess current problems and weaknesses for further development of GM. Patients and Methods: This study adopted an observational design. GM practitioners were selected from the mailing lists of two primary professional associations for Japanese GM doctors. We included physicians currently working in a GM department, those selfdescribed as GM doctors, and those board-certified in family medicine or general internal medicine. Respondents replied to survey questions about their sociodemographic data, job descriptions, and the requisite skills for practice. GM doctors’ job description and required skills were categorized into “clinical,” “management,” “education,” and “research.” Participants (n = 971) were compared based on job descriptions and important skills in each category by facility type, size, and position. Results: “Clinical” was indicated as the most important category for both job description and important skills, followed by “management,” “education,” and “research.” For job description details, “follow-up outpatient” (35.6%) ranked first for “clinical,” and “resident education” (57.3%) ranked first for “education.” By facility type and size, job description and important skills decreased for clinical and management categories as facility sizes increased; the opposite was true for “education.” “Research” was generally rated low. By position, no significant difference was found in effort or importance given to research. Conclusion: This study is the first survey on GM physicians across Japan. The results show that while Japanese GM physicians focus on and place importance on clinical practice, they are less involved in research and do not consider research skills to be important. The challenge for the future development of GM lies in research.
KW - General medicine doctors
KW - Job description
KW - Observational study
KW - Research skills
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85124350162&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.2147/IJGM.S336828
DO - 10.2147/IJGM.S336828
M3 - 学術論文
C2 - 35125887
AN - SCOPUS:85124350162
SN - 1178-7074
VL - 15
SP - 975
EP - 984
JO - International Journal of General Medicine
JF - International Journal of General Medicine
ER -