Abstract
The healthcare system in Germany is characterized by a comprehensive local patient care. Nevertheless, due to the increasing lack of medical personnel bottlenecks are impending, which are not only of a temporary nature. The increasing demography-related needs for care, insufficient healthcare competence of many people and the inadequate prevention will strengthen the demand for medical and nursing personnel. At the same time, physicians and nursing personnel from the high birth rate baby boomer years are leaving the healthcare system. This age cohort must now be replaced by a younger workforce; however, in Germany too few physicians are being trained when measured against the requirements. A marked increase in the number of university study places in medicine will not be able to alleviate the deficit in the short term but prospectively there is no way past an expansion of capacities. The decline in panel physicians, especially in general practitioner care, is accompanied by a clear increase of employees in the outpatient sector. The desire for reduced working hours is clearly recognizable throughout all age cohorts. The part-time quota is increasing. The discrepancy between desired and actual working times is largely underestimated. The increased part-time quota already shows that something must fundamentally change to be able to provide sufficient medical manpower and working hours for the treatment of patients. The association between increased part-time quota and dissatisfaction with the working situation in hospitals is obvious and has repercussions for the medical care. In a multifactorial process the causes and sequelae of bottlenecks in skilled personnel are mutually strengthened in a negative spiral. In the short term, the deficit in medical personnel can only be counteracted by a better cooperation between the outpatient and inpatient fields of care and by a massive reduction in bureaucracy. The digitalization can without doubt contribute to the relief of the healthcare system. Telemedical applications can improve the treatment in rural and structurally weak regions.
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