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Physician executives in managed care: characteristics and job involvement across two career stages.
J Healthc Manag. 1998 Nov-Dec; 43(6):481-97.JH

Abstract

This paper examines characteristics, job involvement, and career stage differences among 294 physician executives working in managed care settings. The following research questions guide the study: What types of physicians are currently in managerial roles in these settings? What role (if any) does medical career stage play in physician executives' professional and job-related attitudes? What factors are related to physician executives' involvement in their management roles? Several observations are made from the findings. First, contemporary physician executives see management as an exciting alternative career that involves multiple work loyalties, weaker beliefs in traditional professional values, and the sacrifice of significant amounts of clinical for management work. Second, these trends are more pronounced for physician executives at earlier points in their medical careers, although their work loyalties to profession and employing organization are weaker than older physician executives' loyalties. Younger individuals' involvement in management work, more than older individuals' involvement, appears to depend upon the surrounding work climate within the organization. Finally, the amount of time spent by physician executives as clinicians is inversely related to how psychologically attached they are to management, regardless of career stage.

Authors+Show Affiliations

State University of New York, Albany, USA. tjh02@health.state.ny.us

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

10338927

Citation

Hoff, T J.. "Physician Executives in Managed Care: Characteristics and Job Involvement Across Two Career Stages." Journal of Healthcare Management / American College of Healthcare Executives, vol. 43, no. 6, 1998, pp. 481-97.
Hoff TJ. Physician executives in managed care: characteristics and job involvement across two career stages. J Healthc Manag. 1998;43(6):481-97.
Hoff, T. J. (1998). Physician executives in managed care: characteristics and job involvement across two career stages. Journal of Healthcare Management / American College of Healthcare Executives, 43(6), 481-97.
Hoff TJ. Physician Executives in Managed Care: Characteristics and Job Involvement Across Two Career Stages. J Healthc Manag. 1998 Nov-Dec;43(6):481-97. PubMed PMID: 10338927.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Physician executives in managed care: characteristics and job involvement across two career stages. A1 - Hoff,T J, PY - 1999/5/26/pubmed PY - 1999/5/26/medline PY - 1999/5/26/entrez SP - 481 EP - 97 JF - Journal of healthcare management / American College of Healthcare Executives JO - J Healthc Manag VL - 43 IS - 6 N2 - This paper examines characteristics, job involvement, and career stage differences among 294 physician executives working in managed care settings. The following research questions guide the study: What types of physicians are currently in managerial roles in these settings? What role (if any) does medical career stage play in physician executives' professional and job-related attitudes? What factors are related to physician executives' involvement in their management roles? Several observations are made from the findings. First, contemporary physician executives see management as an exciting alternative career that involves multiple work loyalties, weaker beliefs in traditional professional values, and the sacrifice of significant amounts of clinical for management work. Second, these trends are more pronounced for physician executives at earlier points in their medical careers, although their work loyalties to profession and employing organization are weaker than older physician executives' loyalties. Younger individuals' involvement in management work, more than older individuals' involvement, appears to depend upon the surrounding work climate within the organization. Finally, the amount of time spent by physician executives as clinicians is inversely related to how psychologically attached they are to management, regardless of career stage. SN - 1096-9012 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/10338927/Physician_executives_in_managed_care:_characteristics_and_job_involvement_across_two_career_stages_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -