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Attitudes toward cost-conscious care among U.S. physicians and medical students: analysis of national cross-sectional survey data by age and stage of training.

Andrea N Leep HunderfundLiselotte N DyrbyeStephanie R StarrJay MandrekarJon C TilburtPaul GeorgeElizabeth G BaxleyJed D GonzaloChristopher MoriatesSusan D GooldPatricia A CarneyBonnie M MillerSara J GrethleinTonya L FancherMatthew K WyniaDarcy A Reed
Published in: BMC medical education (2018)
Physician attitudes toward cost-conscious care are similar across age groups. However, physician attitudes differ significantly from medical students, even among the youngest physicians most proximate to students in age. Medical student responses suggest they are more accepting of cost-conscious care than physicians and attribute more responsibility for reducing costs to organizations and systems rather than individuals. This may be due to the combined effects of generational differences, new medical school curricula, students' relative inexperience providing cost-conscious care within complex healthcare systems, and the rapidly evolving U.S. healthcare system.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • primary care
  • quality improvement
  • medical students
  • palliative care
  • emergency department
  • affordable care act
  • artificial intelligence
  • health information