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Pulse
This year, for the first time, the CMA's Physician Resource Questionnaire (PRQ) asked physicians to state the age at which they plan to retire from active medical practice. While the average age of planned retirement is 63 years, there are distinct differences among demographic groups. Female physicians tend to plan to retire earlier than their male colleagues (at age 60 versus age 64). The average age of planned retirement for GP/FPs (62 years) is slightly lower than for medical and surgical specialists (64 years) (see Fig. 1). Interestingly, the average age of planned retirement increases consistently by age group. On average, those under age 35 plan to retire at 58 years of age, while the average age of planned retirement is 63 years for those in the 4554 age group and 66 years in the 5564 age group. On average, active physicians aged 65 and older plan to retire at 72 years. The PRQ also asked physicians to identify factors that might prevent them from retiring at their planned age. Insufficient personal savings was the most frequently cited barrier, with 66.2% of respondents indicating that this could interfere with their retirement plans. Younger physicians appear to be particularly concerned about having insufficient savings to retire at their planned age, with 73.3% of physicians under age 35 and 71.7% of those aged 3544 citing this as a potential barrier, compared with 58.1% of those aged 5564 and 43.6% of those aged 65 and older. Overall, 16.5% of physicians indicated that failure to find a suitable replacement could impede their retirement plans. This appears to be a greater concern among rural physicians; 22.5% of them cited it as a barrier to retirement, compared with 15.9% of urban physicians. At 21.4%, GP/FPs were more likely to view inability to find a replacement as a possible barrier to retirement, compared with only 11.1% of medical specialists and 10.9% of surgical specialists. The 2000 PRQ was mailed to a random sample of 8000 Canadian physicians, and the response ate was 36.3%. Results are considered accurate to within ±1.9%, 19 times out of 20. Shelley Martin, martis@cma.ca
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