Subject(s)
Job Satisfaction , Physicians/supply & distribution , Rural Health , Adult , Aged , Health Services , Humans , Life Style , Middle Aged , Missouri , Osteopathic Medicine , Physician-Patient Relations , Urban Population , WorkforceABSTRACT
The study examines changes in location of osteopathic and medical doctors in a 20-county area of rural Missouri over a 14-year period. Losses of osteopathic physicians were greater than medical doctors. However, there was a convergence over the 14-year period in background characteristics of the two types of physicians. The finding of greater spatial mobility of DOs is placed in the context of professional mobility of osteopathy. It is also argued that as practice opportunities for DOs increase, background factors associated with early socialization become more influential in choice of practice sites. The relationship of practice opportunities to choice of practice sites can be extended to foreign medical school graduates and "new health practitioners."