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Otolaryngology: Open Access - Current State of the Otolaryngology Workforce Post-COVID-19 in US: Applications by Subspecialty
ISSN: 2161-119X

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  • Mini Review   
  • Otolaryngol
  • DOI: 10.4172/2161-119X.1000456

Current State of the Otolaryngology Workforce Post-COVID-19 in US: Applications by Subspecialty

Lara Thomas*
Departments of Otolaryngology and Pharmacology and Chemical Biology, University of Pittsburgh and University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute, Pittsburgh, US
*Corresponding Author: Lara Thomas, Departments of Otolaryngology and Pharmacology and Chemical Biology, y, University of Pittsburgh and University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute, Pittsburgh, United States, Email: larathomas13@yahoo.co.edu

Received: 02-Sep-2021 / Accepted Date: 16-Sep-2021 / Published Date: 23-Sep-2021 DOI: 10.4172/2161-119X.1000456

The American health care system is evolving at an inchmeal fleetfooted pace. The structure of health care delivery is moving toward larger and another mixed system. The traditional pattern of independent practice for croakers is being displanted by contracted arrangements among large groups of clinicians. The aegis of medical care is having changes due to domestic legislation as well as pressures from payors to remain competitive. Aegis systems are evolving toward “packets” and complication- hung prepayment with the expectance that patient corollaries will one day form the footing for payment. These trends all have arraignments for the fund of health care professionals as they choose to enter medication and surgery [1].

The practice of otolaryngology and multifold other surgical specialties has changed significantly over the old three decades. For exemplification, vascular surgery scarcely lived in the early 1980’s and is now an independent specialty. New procedures, unheard of yea 20 eras ago, are now performed by a variety of surgical specialists. The practice of head and neck oncologic surgery, cranium base surgery, neurootology, head and neck endocrine surgery, and pediatric otolaryngology has developed over this time period, amplifying the demand for otolaryngologists to perform procedures that have been new developed to treat cases that are appertained to them by general surgeons. New technology, new procedures, and changes in surgical training pathways and certificate have acted in a redivision of the division of labor within all the surgical specialties and an amplifying proliferation of specialty surgeons of legion types, including otolaryngologists [2].

This theme is rested on a fact waste that was developed as part of a series of policy posts produced by the American College of Surgeons Health Policy Research Institute (ACS HPRI) illustrating surgical staff trends. The target of these brief reports is to supply decision makers with descriptive data on the staff that can be used to inform health policy. This fact waste focuses on trends in the otolaryngology staff since 1981

Relative to population, the stock of otolaryngologists increased from 1981 until 2001, was stable between 2001 and 2006, and either began to decline between 2001 and 2006. Either, between 2000 and 2009 the number of otolaryngology tenants waxing certified by the American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS) dropped19.3 percent. As stock has contracted, distribution also has wax problematic. Between 2004 and 2009, one in five (641) counties lost otolaryngologists relative to population. Of these, 88 counties lost all their otolaryngologists. Further than half (59.8 percent, n =) of all. U.S. counties had no otolaryngologists in either 2004 or 2009 [3].

In addition, we inaugurate that otolaryngology is more manlike- dominated than maximum surgical specialties. Womanish otolaryngologists are disproportionately represented in medical center settings. In the last decade, the number of solo practice otolaryngologists in country counties diminished significantly.

The number of otolaryngologists in active practice in the U.S. (barring habitants in training) increased 60 percent between 1981 and 2009. Notwithstanding, the proportion of otolaryngologists per population increased from 1981 until 2001, was stable between 2001 and 2006, and either began to decline between 2006 and 2009. Although this recent decline in fund isn’t as dramatic as those in thoracic, general, and urologic surgery during the same period, the diminishing number of habitants seeking board certificate in otolaryngology will likely accelerate the decline in fund in the near future [4].

Age and gender of the help

With an average age of51.4 generations in 2009, otolaryngologists in active practice are slightly aged than the average age for all surgical specialties (50.9 generations). In 2009,15.1 percent were aged than 65 compared with14.2 percent for all surgeons. This represents added than a 4 chance point increase in otolaryngologists 65 and aged since 1981, when the 65 and aged age group comprised10.8 percent of the force. This increase is roughly equal to the average rate of aging of the overall surgeon force [5].

References

  1. Poley ST (2012) Independent Practice Becoming Increasingly Rare Among Surgeons.
  2. Kim EY (2011) Neck dissections in the United States from 2000 to 2006. Head Neck 33: 768-73.
  3. Winters RA (2011) medical mission at home: The needs of rural America in terms of otolaryngology care. J Rural Health 27: 297-301.
  4. Bhattacharyya N (2011) The increasing workload in head and neck surgery. Laryngoscope 121: 111-5.

Citation: Thomas L (2021) Current State of the Otolaryngology Workforce PostCOVID-19 in US: Applications by Subspecialty. Otolaryngol (Sunnyvale) 11: 456. DOI: 10.4172/2161-119X.1000456

Copyright: © 2021 Thomas L. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited

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