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Publication year
2011Source
Health Economics, 20, 2, (2011), pp. 147-60ISSN
Annotation
01 februari 2011
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
IQ Healthcare
Journal title
Health Economics
Volume
vol. 20
Issue
iss. 2
Page start
p. 147
Page end
p. 60
Subject
NCEBP 3: Implementation ScienceAbstract
We analyse the determinants of annual net income and wages (net income/hours) of general practitioners (GPs) using data for 2271 GPs in England recorded during Autumn 2008. The average GP had an annual net income of pound97,500 and worked 43 h per week. The mean wage was pound51 per h. Net income and wages depended on gender, experience, list size, partnership size, whether or not the GP worked in a dispensing practice, whether they were salaried of self-employed, whether they worked in a practice with a nationally or locally negotiated contract, and the characteristics of the local population (proportion from ethnic minorities, rurality, and income deprivation). The findings have implications for pay discrimination by GP gender and ethnicity, GP preferences for partnership size, incentives for competition for patients, and compensating differentials for local population characteristics. They also shed light on the attractiveness to GPs in England of locally negotiated (personal medical services) versus nationally negotiated (general medical services) contracts.
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- Academic publications [226841]
- Electronic publications [108452]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [86405]
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