The Efficiency of self-employed general practitioners and factors affecting it: A study in Iran

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Abstract

Objective: Physicians as an economic firm make use of available resources such as time, human forces and space to provide healthcare services. The current study aimed at estimating the technical efficiency of Iranian self-employed general practitioners (GPs) and its effective factors using data envelopment analysis and regression analysis. Results: About 2% of the GPs were fully efficient and the remaining (98%) were inefficient. Almost, 2.09% of the physicians had constant returns to scale, and 31.41% and 66.49% of them had increasing and decreasing returns to scale, respectively. According to the regression estimates, gender (female) (β = 3.776, P = 0.072), age (β = 0.475, P = 0.013), practice experience (β = - 0.477, P = 0.015), contract with the insurer (β = - 6.475, P = 0.005) and economic expectations (β = 1.939, P = 0.014) showed significant effect on GPs inefficiency. Most of the GPs surveyed did not optimally allocate their time and physical and human resources to provide their services. Female GPs, older ones, those with fewer practice experience, those with higher economic expectations, and the GPs with no insurance contract were more inefficient. Increasing the insurance coverage of self-employed GPs and providing them with training in office economic management can reduce their inefficiency.

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Hajibagheri, R., Lotfi, F., & Bayati, M. (2020). The Efficiency of self-employed general practitioners and factors affecting it: A study in Iran. BMC Research Notes, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13104-020-05104-3

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