More than 750 primary care clinicians responded to the latest survey (Round 27). Responses came from 48 states, the District of Columbia, and Guam. The highest number of responses came from Virginia and Texas (over 20% of the total combined), with Oregon, Washington state, Colorado, and Massachusetts each representing over 5% of the sample. Physicians continue to represent over three-quarters of responses; nurse practitioners (14%) and PAs (3%) are the next most common certifications, with 6% marking “other.” That majority of respondents (73%) specializes in family medicine, followed by internal medicine (14%), pediatrics (7%), geriatrics (3%) mental/behavioral health (1%), pharmacy (<1%), and other (5%). 16% work in a primary care and academic or residency practice; another 6% work in a convenience care setting such as retail clinic or urgent care; and 5% practice in a direct primary care or membership based setting. About a fifth (22%) of respondents describe their practice as “rural,” and just under a third work in a designated patient-centered primary care home. The size of respondents’ practices varies: 1-3 clinicians (31%); 4-9 clinicians (30%); and 10+ clinicians (39%).
Series 27 of the clinician survey ran March 10-17, 2021. Total responses: 765.
“Of all specialties, family medicine has had the highest rate of COVID cases and COVID deaths among physicians. WE have been the hardest-hit and impacted during the pandemic. We need support.” – Family medicine clinician in Illinois
A peer-reviewed publication supports this statement. It found that “general practice/family medicine/primary care” account for 26.9% of physician deaths among 19 specialties reported in the study. Pediatrics (4.7% of deaths) and internal medicine (5.5% of deaths) were calculated separately. See Gouda D, Singh PM, Gouda P, Goudra B. An Overview of Health Care Worker Reported Deaths During the COVID-19 Pandemic. J Am Board Fam Med. 2021 Feb;34(Suppl):S244-246.
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Round 27 executive summary | 762.59 KB |
Are you a physician, nurse practitioner, or PA working in primary care?
Help PCC and the Larry A. Green Center track how your practice is responding to the COVID-19 outbreak by completing the Green Center's occasional survey.