A Mixed-Method Study on Physicians Perceptions of Pay for Performance: Impact on Professionalism, Morality and Work-Life Balance

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Date

2025

Journal Title

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Volume Title

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BMC

Open Access Color

GOLD

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Yes

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Top 10%

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Abstract

BackgroundPay-for-performance system (P4P) has been in operation in the Turkish healthcare sector since 2004. While the government defended that it encouraged healthcare professionals' job motivation, and improved patient satisfaction by increasing efficiency and service quality, healthcare professionals have emphasized the system's negative effects on working conditions, physicians' trustworthiness, and cost-quality outcomes. In this study, we investigated physicians' accounts of current working conditions, their status as a moral agent, and their professional attitudes in the context of P4P's perceived effects on their professional, social, private, and future lives.MethodsFirst, we held 3 focus groups with 19 residents and 1 specialist regarding their lived experiences under P4P and thematically analyzed the transcripts. Second, we developed a questionnaire to assess how generalizable the qualitative findings are for a broader group of physicians. The tool has three parts questioning 1) demographic information, 2) working conditions, and 3) perceived consequences and effects of P4P. 2136 physicians responded to the survey. After refining the data, we conducted the statistical analysis over 1378 responses by using Spearman's correlation coefficient, exploratory factor analysis (EFA) for categorical data, and Kruskal-Wallis variance analysis.ResultsThematic analysis revealed two dimensions: 1) factors leading to estrangement, and 2) manifestations of estrangement. As for the initial, participants thought that P4P affected relationships at work; family and social relationships; working conditions; quality of the specialty training; quality of healthcare services; and it caused healthcare system-related consequences. Concerning the latter, the following themes emerged: Estrangement of the physician; damaging effects on physician's psychology; physician's perception of their future life; and physician as a moral agent. According to EFA, a 5-factor structure was appropriate: F1) Estrangement; F2) adverse effects on the physician's quality of life; F3) favorable consequences; F4) physicians becoming disreputable; F5) unfavorable consequences.ConclusionsThe findings suggest that under P4P, physicians have become more estranged towards their profession, their patients, and themselves. They suffer from deteriorating working conditions, lack of motivation, lack of work-related satisfaction, and hopelessness regarding their future. Furthermore, P4P impairs their ability to realize themselves as moral subjects practicing in alignment with professional values and principles.

Description

Tut, Hasan/0009-0004-2677-8926

Keywords

Turkey, Pay-For-Performance, P4P, Estrangement, Alienation, Lived Experience, Moral Subject, Professionalism, Job-Motivation, Job-Satisfaction, Marketization, Unintended Consequences, Male, Adult, Pay-for-performance, Turkey, Alienation, Attitude of Health Personnel, Research, Work-Life Balance, P4P, Estrangement, Lived experience, Focus Groups, Middle Aged, Morals, Job Satisfaction, Professionalism, Physicians, Surveys and Questionnaires, Humans, Female, Public aspects of medicine, RA1-1270, Reimbursement, Incentive, Qualitative Research

Fields of Science

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WoS Q

Q2

Scopus Q

Q1
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BMC Health Services Research

Volume

25

Issue

1

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Scopus : 5

PubMed : 1

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Mendeley Readers : 46

SCOPUS™ Citations

5

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3

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3

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Downloads

22

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