PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Terrence McDonald AU - Brendan Cord Lethebe AU - Lee A. Green TI - Calculating physician supply using a service day method and the income percentiles method: a descriptive analysis AID - 10.9778/cmajo.20200037 DP - 2020 Oct 01 TA - CMAJ Open PG - E747--E753 VI - 8 IP - 4 4099 - http://www.cmajopen.ca/content/8/4/E747.short 4100 - http://www.cmajopen.ca/content/8/4/E747.full SO - CMAJ2020 Oct 01; 8 AB - Background: It is important to have an accurate count of physicians and a measurable understanding of their service provision for physician resource planning. Our objective was to compare 2 methods (income percentiles [IP] and service day activities [SVD]) for calculating the supply of full-time (FT) and part-time (PT) primary care physicians (PCPs) as measures of both physician supply counts and level of provider continuity.Methods: Using an observational study design, we compared 2 methods of calculating the supply of PT and FT PCPs for 2011–2015. For the IP approach, the Canadian Institute for Health Information’s method was applied to Alberta Health billing data. The SVD method calculated annual service days for fee-for-service PCPs. A simple descriptive analysis was conducted of the supply of PT and FT PCPs.Results: The 2 methods agreed on the FT versus PT status of 85.2% of PCPs in 2015 but disagreed on the status of 490 PCPs. A total of 239 PCPs were classified as working FT by the IP method but PT by the SVD method. Two hundred and fifty-one PCPs were classified as working PT according by the IP method but FT by the SVD method. The former group of 239 PCPs worked fewer days per week (3.22 v. 4.1) and fewer weekend days per year (8.6 v. 24.1), billed more per year ($300 327 v. $201 834) and saw more patients per day (26.8 v. 17.8) with less continuity of care (38.0% v. 72.0%) than the latter group of 251 PCPs.Interpretation: The SVD method provides a valid alternative to calculating GP supply that distinguishes groups of physicians that the standard IP methodology does not. Those groups provide very different service; policy-makers may benefit from distinguishing them.