Occupational isolation among general practitioners in Finland
Auteur M Aira
Auteur P Mäntyselkä
Auteur A Vehviläinen
Auteur E Kumpusalo
Résumé BACKGROUND: It is proposed that isolation in general practice is one of the factors that leads to work-related stress and the low attraction of this work. In Finland, 71% of physicians who worked or had worked in a primary health care centre agreed with the statement ‘working as a doctor in a health centre is too often isolated work’. AIMS: To gain a deeper understanding of this feeling and to find out which factors constitute it. METHODS: A qualitative in-depth interview study of 32 physicians working in a primary health care centre in Finland. Qualitative analysis of transcribed verbatim interviews using a constant comparison method. RESULTS: The main components of isolation were making decisions alone, lack of collaboration with other workers in the health centre and secondary care specialists, not being a part of the work community and lack of mentoring at work. CONCLUSIONS: Enabling flexible teamwork and social and professional support networks are the key issues in solving the problem of occupational isolation in general practice.
Publication Occupational Medicine (Oxford, England)
Date Jun 22, 2010
Chercher cette référence sur : Google Scholar, Worldcat
doi:10.1093/occmed/kqq082
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