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題名 In the name of family medicine
作者 周麗芳
Chou, Li-Fang
Liu, Ya-An
Cheng, Sally
Hsu, Ya-Chuan
Yang, Po-Chin
Chang, Hsiao-Ting
Lin, Ming-Hwai
Hwang, Tzeng-Ji Chen & Shinn-Jang
貢獻者 財政系
關鍵詞 family medicine; clinics; names; professional identity; Taiwan
日期 2020-06
上傳時間 24-May-2021 15:21:07 (UTC+8)
摘要 Family medicine is officially a specialty, but is often not regarded as a specialty by the general public. Past studies have usually investigated the opinions of medical students and resident physicians regarding family medicine, whereas few have focused on practicing family physicians themselves, especially in terms of analyzing how they represent themselves. This study aimed to investigate the patterns of clinic names to better apprehend whether general practitioners see themselves as being on an equal footing with other medical specialists. The registered names, medical specialties, and levels of urbanization of all clinics of Western medicine in Taiwan were collected. For clinics of each specialty, we examined whether their names contained the corresponding specialty designation. For example, a family medicine clinic was checked to determine whether its name contained the term “family medicine” or its abbreviation. The naming of family medicine clinics was then compared with that of clinics with other specialties. Of the 9867 Western medicine clinics included in this study, two-thirds (n = 6592) were single-specialty clinics. In contrast to the high percentages of single-specialty clinics of other specialties with specialty-containing names (97.5% for ophthalmology, 94.8% for dermatology, and 94.7% for otolaryngology), only 13.3% (132/989) of the family medicine clinics had such names. In addition, the urban family medicine clinics had a higher proportion (15.2%, 74/487) of specialty-containing names than the suburban (12.6%, 44/349) and rural family medicine clinics (9.2%, 14/153). Overall, a low percentage of family medicine clinics in Taiwan included “family medicine” in their names. This issue of professional identity deserves further qualitative investigation. View Full-Text
關聯 International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, Vol.17, No.11, pp.4062
資料類型 article
DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17114062
dc.contributor 財政系
dc.creator (作者) 周麗芳
dc.creator (作者) Chou, Li-Fang
dc.creator (作者) Liu, Ya-An
dc.creator (作者) Cheng, Sally
dc.creator (作者) Hsu, Ya-Chuan
dc.creator (作者) Yang, Po-Chin
dc.creator (作者) Chang, Hsiao-Ting
dc.creator (作者) Lin, Ming-Hwai
dc.creator (作者) Hwang, Tzeng-Ji Chen & Shinn-Jang
dc.date (日期) 2020-06
dc.date.accessioned 24-May-2021 15:21:07 (UTC+8)-
dc.date.available 24-May-2021 15:21:07 (UTC+8)-
dc.date.issued (上傳時間) 24-May-2021 15:21:07 (UTC+8)-
dc.identifier.uri (URI) http://nccur.lib.nccu.edu.tw/handle/140.119/135081-
dc.description.abstract (摘要) Family medicine is officially a specialty, but is often not regarded as a specialty by the general public. Past studies have usually investigated the opinions of medical students and resident physicians regarding family medicine, whereas few have focused on practicing family physicians themselves, especially in terms of analyzing how they represent themselves. This study aimed to investigate the patterns of clinic names to better apprehend whether general practitioners see themselves as being on an equal footing with other medical specialists. The registered names, medical specialties, and levels of urbanization of all clinics of Western medicine in Taiwan were collected. For clinics of each specialty, we examined whether their names contained the corresponding specialty designation. For example, a family medicine clinic was checked to determine whether its name contained the term “family medicine” or its abbreviation. The naming of family medicine clinics was then compared with that of clinics with other specialties. Of the 9867 Western medicine clinics included in this study, two-thirds (n = 6592) were single-specialty clinics. In contrast to the high percentages of single-specialty clinics of other specialties with specialty-containing names (97.5% for ophthalmology, 94.8% for dermatology, and 94.7% for otolaryngology), only 13.3% (132/989) of the family medicine clinics had such names. In addition, the urban family medicine clinics had a higher proportion (15.2%, 74/487) of specialty-containing names than the suburban (12.6%, 44/349) and rural family medicine clinics (9.2%, 14/153). Overall, a low percentage of family medicine clinics in Taiwan included “family medicine” in their names. This issue of professional identity deserves further qualitative investigation. View Full-Text
dc.format.extent 1339096 bytes-
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf-
dc.relation (關聯) International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, Vol.17, No.11, pp.4062
dc.subject (關鍵詞) family medicine; clinics; names; professional identity; Taiwan
dc.title (題名) In the name of family medicine
dc.type (資料類型) article
dc.identifier.doi (DOI) 10.3390/ijerph17114062
dc.doi.uri (DOI) https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17114062