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Chinese Journal of Clinicians(Electronic Edition) ›› 2025, Vol. 19 ›› Issue (09): 696-704. doi: 10.3877/cma.j.issn.1674-0785.2025.09.009

• Investigation Research • Previous Articles    

Attitudes toward granting prescriptive authority to public health physicians: a survey among clinical practitioners in Jiangsu Province

Kexin Li1,2, Weizhong Zha3, Wenjuan Chen4, Feng Su1, Yiqi Wu1,2, Hong Zhu2, Zhe Wang4,(), Qinghua Ma1,2,()   

  1. 1 Yuanhe Sub-district Community Healthcare Center, Xiangcheng District, Suzhou 215131, China
    2 School of Public Health, Suzhou Medical College, Soochow University, Suzhou 215123, China
    3 Yangchenghu People's Hospital, Xiangcheng District, Suzhou 215138, China
    4 Jiangsu Provincial Health Inspection and Guidance Center, Nanjing 210008, China
  • Received:2025-09-26 Online:2025-09-30 Published:2026-01-14
  • Contact: Zhe Wang, Qinghua Ma

Abstract:

Objective

To investigate clinical practitioners' attitudes toward granting prescription rights to public health physicians in Jiangsu primary care settings and to provide evidence for advancing integrated medicine-public health services.

Methods

A convenience sampling survey was conducted among 255 primary care physicians in Jiangsu Province, China. Data were analyzed using chi-square and Fisher's exact tests.

Results

Although 94.90% of respondents supported granting limited prescription rights to public health physicians after training, only 58.43% believed that they were competent. Key barriers included ambiguous regulations (83.53%) and inadequate standardized training (72.94%). The most likely problem brought by empowerment is the increase in the workload of public health physicians (74.12%). Chronic disease management (90.10%) and immunization (85.95%) were preferred scenarios for authorization. One-year clinical training (42.98%) led by attending physicians (34.30%) was recommended.

Conclusion

Despite their support, primary care physicians express concerns about competency. Implementing a tiered authorization system, along with legal clarification and enhanced clinical training, is crucial.

Key words: Granting prescriptive authority to public health physicians, Clinical physicians, Primary healthcare institutions, Attitude

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