Objective: To examine how rural physician team effectiveness predicts outcomes of team performance, team commitment, and intentions to stay.
Design: Surveys measuring team climate, team efficacy, and team performance were sent to rural physician team members. Surveys measuring team performance were sent to external observers in supervisory positions.
Setting: Northern Ontario communities.
Participants: Rural physicians and external observers, the latter including hospital chief executive officers, family health team executive directors, and clinic managers.
Main Outcomes Measures: Total scale scores were generated using mean substitution. Cronbach α was used to assess internal consistencies of team member-level measures. Team-level measures were created by averaging the responses across team members, and intraclass correlation coefficients for each scale of each team of 2 or more members were calculated to yield a measure of rating consistency. A test was used to assess the possible difference between team performance ratings by team members and external observers. Team-level relationships within the team effectiveness model were assessed using mediated regression, and generalized estimating equations were used to assess the relationships in the model between team-level (team efficacy) and individual-level (affective team commitment and intentions to stay) variables to address the nonindependence of these data.
Results: Overall, 70 rural physicians from 26 Rural and Northern Physician Group Agreement communities with 2 or more physicians and 25 external observers from 19 of the 26 Rural and Northern Physician Group Agreement communities participated in the study. The findings showed that team climate (composed of decision making, communication, and conflict resolution measures) positively predicted team efficacy, which in turn positively predicted team performance. This fully mediated set of relationships held whether team performance was rated by the physicians themselves or by the external observers. Team efficacy significantly predicted affective team commitment ( value=0.69, standard error=0.08, Wald =13.89, <.001) in the first analysis and intentions to stay ( value=0.34, standard error=0.15; Wald =5.42, =.020) in the second analysis. However, when the other variables impacting physician retention were added to the model in predicting intentions to stay, team efficacy did not predict it above and beyond these additional predictors.
Conclusion: The findings support initiatives that attempt to enhance physician team effectiveness in rural physician teams by influencing team decision making, communication, and conflict resolution to improve team performance, physician attitudes, and commitment.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.46747/cfp.6804280 | DOI Listing |
Telemed J E Health
December 2024
Post Graduate Studies Program in Epidemiology, School of Medicine, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), Porto Alegre-RS, Brazil.
: To explore the potential of gatekeeping for specialized consultations and patient care via remote interactions with family physicians. This cross-sectional study was conducted at a tertiary hospital between November 2020 and December 2021, when specialized consultations were canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Patients who were evaluated for remote consultation with family physicians were included.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJAMA Intern Med
December 2024
Division of Health Policy & Management, University of Minnesota School of Public Health, Minneapolis.
JAMA Neurol
December 2024
Department of Neurology, Research Institute and Hospital of National Cancer Center, Goyang, Korea.
Importance: The temporal dynamics of serum glial fibrillary acidic protein (sGFAP) and serum neurofilament light chain (sNfL) as biomarkers of disease activity for neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMOSD) remain underexplored.
Objective: To determine optimal timing for assessing sGFAP and sNfL, establish cutoff values differentiating between attacks and remissions in NMOSD, and evaluate these findings across independent cohorts.
Design, Setting, And Participants: This retrospective, longitudinal, multicenter cohort study was conducted among patients with aquaporin-4 antibody (AQP4-IgG)-positive NMOSD.
JAMA Intern Med
December 2024
Department of Biobehavioral Sciences, Columbia University, New York, New York.
J Clin Psychopharmacol
December 2024
From the NRx Pharmaceuticals, Inc, Wilmington, DE.
Background: Extensive experience with antidepressant clinical trials indicates that interrater reliability (IRR) must be maintained to achieve reliable clinical trial results. Contract research organizations have generally accepted 6 points of rating disparity between study site raters and central "master raters" as concordant, in part because of the personnel turnover and variability within many contract research organizations. We developed and tested an "insourced" model using a small, dedicated team of rater program managers (RPMs), to determine whether 3 points of disparity could successfully be demonstrated as a feasible standard for rating concordance.
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