The Comparative Retention of National Health Service Corps and Other Rural Physicians: Results of a 9-Year Follow-up Study

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Abstract

Objective.—To contrast the retention of physicians serving National Health Service Corps (NHSC) Scholarship Program obligations in rural settings to that of non-NHSC physicians working in the same or similar practices, and to identify promising retention-enhancing strategies. Design.—Cohort study. Participants.—Four hundred twelve primary care physicians initially identified during an earlier study as working in a national stratified random sample of 178 externally subsidized rural clinics in 1981. Thirty-six percent were serving obligations to the NHSC, nearly all through the NHSC’s Scholarship Program. The NHSC and non-NHSC inception cohorts (those first coming to their 1981 [or “index”] practices from May 1979 through December 1981) were created from within the entire group for use in most analyses. Intervention.—In 1990, physicians were resurveyed to learn of their backgrounds, experiences in their index practices, and their subsequent career moves. Results.—By 1984 and in each year thereafter, fewer NHSC than non-NHSC physicians of the entire respondent cohort remained (1) in their index practices, (2) in their index communities, and (3) in practice in any rural county (P

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Pathman, D. E., Konrad, T. R., & Ricketts, T. C. (1992). The Comparative Retention of National Health Service Corps and Other Rural Physicians: Results of a 9-Year Follow-up Study. JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 268(12), 1552–1558. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.1992.03490120066030

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