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Early-career and fellow gynecologic oncologists perceive underpreparedness for the business of medicine: A Society of gynecologic oncology survey study

Publication ,  Journal Article
Dholakia, J; Boyd, LR; Agarwal, R; Moss, H; Ko, EM; Aviki, E; Liang, MI
Published in: Gynecologic Oncology Reports
October 1, 2024

Objective: There is a research gap on the impact of payment, reimbursement, and academic productivity in career decision-making for early-career (EC) attendings in gynecologic oncology. We sought to assess gynecologic oncology fellows and EC attendings on their knowledge and perceptions regarding the business of medicine. Methods: An anonymous survey was electronically disseminated to fellow and EC SGO members. Key themes were the business of medicine, productivity, and compensation/negotiation. A 5-point Likert scale was utilized; descriptive statistics were calculated using SPSS. Results: There was a 29 % response rate: 82 fellows and 102 EC attendings. Most were white (n = 143, 78 %) and female (n = 138, 75 %.) Most fellows (n = 67, 82 %) were interested in, and most EC (n = 82, 82 %) were employed in, academic/non-private practice. Fellows and EC attendings reported insufficient education on RVUs (relative value units) and reimbursement (80 %, n = 66; 81 %, n = 83) and did not feel prepared for the business aspect of practice (80 %, n = 66; 73 %, n = 75). Over 40 % of fellows did not understand how RVUs relate to practice. Thirty-three percent of EC attendings did not understand RVU assignments; 29 % were satisfied with methods used to determine productivity, and 17 % did not understand their compensation. Over 60 % of fellows felt unprepared to negotiate clinical productivity expectations. For EC attendings, 47 % were uncomfortable negotiating clinical expectations, 32 % negotiating academic expectations, and 52 % negotiating compensation changes. Female EC felt less prepared than male EC regarding the business of medicine (p = 0.02), RVU assignments (p < 0.01), and compensation negotiations (p < 0.01). Conclusion: Most gynecologic oncology fellows and early-career attendings do not feel prepared for the business of medicine. Women were less comfortable with these concepts than men. Formal education should be incorporated into career development curricula.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Gynecologic Oncology Reports

DOI

EISSN

2352-5789

Publication Date

October 1, 2024

Volume

55
 

Citation

APA
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Dholakia, J., Boyd, L. R., Agarwal, R., Moss, H., Ko, E. M., Aviki, E., & Liang, M. I. (2024). Early-career and fellow gynecologic oncologists perceive underpreparedness for the business of medicine: A Society of gynecologic oncology survey study. Gynecologic Oncology Reports, 55. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gore.2024.101501
Dholakia, J., L. R. Boyd, R. Agarwal, H. Moss, E. M. Ko, E. Aviki, and M. I. Liang. “Early-career and fellow gynecologic oncologists perceive underpreparedness for the business of medicine: A Society of gynecologic oncology survey study.” Gynecologic Oncology Reports 55 (October 1, 2024). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gore.2024.101501.
Dholakia J, Boyd LR, Agarwal R, Moss H, Ko EM, Aviki E, et al. Early-career and fellow gynecologic oncologists perceive underpreparedness for the business of medicine: A Society of gynecologic oncology survey study. Gynecologic Oncology Reports. 2024 Oct 1;55.
Dholakia, J., et al. “Early-career and fellow gynecologic oncologists perceive underpreparedness for the business of medicine: A Society of gynecologic oncology survey study.” Gynecologic Oncology Reports, vol. 55, Oct. 2024. Scopus, doi:10.1016/j.gore.2024.101501.
Dholakia J, Boyd LR, Agarwal R, Moss H, Ko EM, Aviki E, Liang MI. Early-career and fellow gynecologic oncologists perceive underpreparedness for the business of medicine: A Society of gynecologic oncology survey study. Gynecologic Oncology Reports. 2024 Oct 1;55.
Journal cover image

Published In

Gynecologic Oncology Reports

DOI

EISSN

2352-5789

Publication Date

October 1, 2024

Volume

55