Which positive factors give general practitioners job satisfaction and make general practice a rewarding career? A European multicentric qualitative research by the European general practice research network

Abstract Background General Practice (GP) seems to be perceived as less attractive throughout Europe. Most of the policies on the subject focused on negative factors. An EGPRN research team from eight participating countries was created in order to clarify the positive factors involved in appeals an...

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Main Authors: B. Le Floch, H. Bastiaens, J. Y. Le Reste, H. Lingner, R. Hoffman, S. Czachowski, R. Assenova, T. H. Koskela, Z. Klemenc-Ketis, P. Nabbe, A. Sowinska, T. Montier, L. Peremans
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-08-01
Series:BMC Family Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12875-019-0985-9
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spelling doaj-9097f4992de84b45be2591bfb7b700442020-11-25T03:54:28ZengBMCBMC Family Practice1471-22962019-08-0120111110.1186/s12875-019-0985-9Which positive factors give general practitioners job satisfaction and make general practice a rewarding career? A European multicentric qualitative research by the European general practice research networkB. Le Floch0H. Bastiaens1J. Y. Le Reste2H. Lingner3R. Hoffman4S. Czachowski5R. Assenova6T. H. Koskela7Z. Klemenc-Ketis8P. Nabbe9A. Sowinska10T. Montier11L. Peremans12EA 7479 SPURBO, Department of General Practice, Université de Bretagne OccidentaleDepartment of Primary and Interdisciplinary Care. Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University AntwerpEA 7479 SPURBO, Department of General Practice, Université de Bretagne OccidentaleCentre for Public Health and Healthcare, Hannover Medical SchoolDepartment of Family Medicine, Tel Aviv UniversityClinical Psychology Department, Nicolaus Copernicus UniversityDepartment of Urology and General Medicine, Department of General Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Medical University of PlovdivUniversity of Tampere, Faculty of Medicine and Life SciencesDepartment of Family Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of LjubljanaEA 7479 SPURBO, Department of General Practice, Université de Bretagne OccidentaleFacultad de Humanidades, Universidad Católica del NorteEA 7479 SPURBO, Department of General Practice, Université de Bretagne OccidentaleDepartment of Primary and Interdisciplinary Care. Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University AntwerpAbstract Background General Practice (GP) seems to be perceived as less attractive throughout Europe. Most of the policies on the subject focused on negative factors. An EGPRN research team from eight participating countries was created in order to clarify the positive factors involved in appeals and retention in GP throughout Europe. The objective was to explore the positive factors supporting the satisfaction of General Practitioners (GPs) in clinical practice throughout Europe. Method Qualitative study, employing face-to-face interviews and focus groups using a phenomenological approach. The setting was primary care in eight European countries: France, Belgium, Germany, Slovenia, Bulgaria, Finland, Poland and Israel. A thematic qualitative analysis was performed following the process described by Braun and Clarke. Codebooks were generated in each country. After translation and back translation of these codebooks, the team clarified and compared the codes and constructed one international codebook used for further coding. Results A purposive sample of 183 GPs, providing primary care to patients in their daily clinical practice, was interviewed across eight countries. The international codebook included 31 interpretative codes and six themes. Five positive themes were common among all the countries involved across Europe: the GP as a person, special skills needed in practice, doctor-patient relationship, freedom in the practice and supportive factors for work-life balance. One theme was not found in Poland or Slovenia: teaching and learning. Conclusion This study identified positive factors which give GPs job satisfaction in their clinical practice. This description focused on the human needs of a GP. They need to have freedom to choose their working environment and to organize their practice to suit themselves. In addition, they need to have access to professional education so they can develop specific skills for General Practice, and also strengthen doctor-patient relationships. Stakeholders should consider these factors when seeking to increase the GP workforce.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12875-019-0985-9AdultCareer choiceCareer mobilityFamily practiceGeneral practitionersHealth care system
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author B. Le Floch
H. Bastiaens
J. Y. Le Reste
H. Lingner
R. Hoffman
S. Czachowski
R. Assenova
T. H. Koskela
Z. Klemenc-Ketis
P. Nabbe
A. Sowinska
T. Montier
L. Peremans
spellingShingle B. Le Floch
H. Bastiaens
J. Y. Le Reste
H. Lingner
R. Hoffman
S. Czachowski
R. Assenova
T. H. Koskela
Z. Klemenc-Ketis
P. Nabbe
A. Sowinska
T. Montier
L. Peremans
Which positive factors give general practitioners job satisfaction and make general practice a rewarding career? A European multicentric qualitative research by the European general practice research network
BMC Family Practice
Adult
Career choice
Career mobility
Family practice
General practitioners
Health care system
author_facet B. Le Floch
H. Bastiaens
J. Y. Le Reste
H. Lingner
R. Hoffman
S. Czachowski
R. Assenova
T. H. Koskela
Z. Klemenc-Ketis
P. Nabbe
A. Sowinska
T. Montier
L. Peremans
author_sort B. Le Floch
title Which positive factors give general practitioners job satisfaction and make general practice a rewarding career? A European multicentric qualitative research by the European general practice research network
title_short Which positive factors give general practitioners job satisfaction and make general practice a rewarding career? A European multicentric qualitative research by the European general practice research network
title_full Which positive factors give general practitioners job satisfaction and make general practice a rewarding career? A European multicentric qualitative research by the European general practice research network
title_fullStr Which positive factors give general practitioners job satisfaction and make general practice a rewarding career? A European multicentric qualitative research by the European general practice research network
title_full_unstemmed Which positive factors give general practitioners job satisfaction and make general practice a rewarding career? A European multicentric qualitative research by the European general practice research network
title_sort which positive factors give general practitioners job satisfaction and make general practice a rewarding career? a european multicentric qualitative research by the european general practice research network
publisher BMC
series BMC Family Practice
issn 1471-2296
publishDate 2019-08-01
description Abstract Background General Practice (GP) seems to be perceived as less attractive throughout Europe. Most of the policies on the subject focused on negative factors. An EGPRN research team from eight participating countries was created in order to clarify the positive factors involved in appeals and retention in GP throughout Europe. The objective was to explore the positive factors supporting the satisfaction of General Practitioners (GPs) in clinical practice throughout Europe. Method Qualitative study, employing face-to-face interviews and focus groups using a phenomenological approach. The setting was primary care in eight European countries: France, Belgium, Germany, Slovenia, Bulgaria, Finland, Poland and Israel. A thematic qualitative analysis was performed following the process described by Braun and Clarke. Codebooks were generated in each country. After translation and back translation of these codebooks, the team clarified and compared the codes and constructed one international codebook used for further coding. Results A purposive sample of 183 GPs, providing primary care to patients in their daily clinical practice, was interviewed across eight countries. The international codebook included 31 interpretative codes and six themes. Five positive themes were common among all the countries involved across Europe: the GP as a person, special skills needed in practice, doctor-patient relationship, freedom in the practice and supportive factors for work-life balance. One theme was not found in Poland or Slovenia: teaching and learning. Conclusion This study identified positive factors which give GPs job satisfaction in their clinical practice. This description focused on the human needs of a GP. They need to have freedom to choose their working environment and to organize their practice to suit themselves. In addition, they need to have access to professional education so they can develop specific skills for General Practice, and also strengthen doctor-patient relationships. Stakeholders should consider these factors when seeking to increase the GP workforce.
topic Adult
Career choice
Career mobility
Family practice
General practitioners
Health care system
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12875-019-0985-9
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