학술논문

A look at the gynecologic oncologist workforce – Are we meeting patient demand?
Document Type
Article
Source
Gynecologic Oncology. Nov2021, Vol. 163 Issue 2, p229-236. 8p.
Subject
*CANCER patients
*ONCOLOGISTS
*GYNECOLOGIC cancer
*CAUCASIAN race
*SERVICES for cancer patients
*LABOR supply
Language
ISSN
0090-8258
Abstract
to examine the geographic distribution of gynecologic oncologists (GO) and assess if the GO workforce is meeting the demand for oncology services for patients with gynecologic cancers. We identified GO by National Provider Identifiers (NPI) and calculated county-level density of GO. County-level gynecologic cancer rates were derived from the U.S. Cancer Statistics to represent demand for GO services. A spatial data plot compared GO workforce to gynecologic cancer service demand. U.S. census county-level demographic information was collected and compared. In 2019, 1527 GO had a registered NPI. Of 3142 counties in the US, 2864 (91.2%) counties had no GO in their local county and 1943 (61.8%) counties had no GO in local or adjacent (neighboring) counties. As the gynecologic cancer rate increases (described in quintiles) in counties, there are fewer counties without a GO or adjacent GO. However, county-level GO density (number of GO per 100,000 women) did not significantly increase as the county-level incidence of gynecologic cancer increased (r = −0.12, p = 0.06)... Women living in counties with the highest gynecologic cancer rates and without access to a GO were more likely to reside in a rural area where residents had a lower median income and were predominately of White race.. There are a significant number of counties in the U.S. without a GO. As county-level gynecologic cancer incidence increased, the proportion of counties without a GO decreased; GO density did not increase with increasing cancer rates. Rural counties with high gynecologic incidence rates are underserved by GO. This information can inform initiatives to improve outreach and collaboration to better meet the needs of patients in different geographic areas. • In 2019, there were 1527 gynecologic oncologists (GO) registered with a NPI in the United States. • 61.8% of US counties did not have a gynecologic oncologist in their local or adjacent county. • 37.2% of counties with the highest gynecologic cancer rates did not have a gynecologic oncologist locally. • Women in counties with the highest gynecologic cancer rate and no GO were lower income, majority white and in rural areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]