Hider Phil, Lay-Yee Roy, Davis Peter
Department of Public Health and General Practice, Christchurch School of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Otago, Christchurch.
N Z Med J. 2007 May 4;120(1253):U2519.
To describe the characteristics of patients who attended rural general practice offices in New Zealand in 2001/2 during normal hours along with the problems they presented and the management that they received. Comparisons are made with patients who attended non-rural practices.
Data were collected from a stratified random survey of GPs in New Zealand as part of the National Primary Medical Care survey carried out in 2001/2.
Response rates at rural and non-rural general practices were high (72%). Comparing practice characteristics by locale, there were fewer full-time equivalent doctors in rural settings, their practice fees were lower, their throughput was slightly higher, and more services were provided (such as evening surgery, group health promotion and doctors involved in maternity care). More rural practitioners had graduated overseas than their urban counterparts but their characteristics were otherwise similar. Patients who presented to rural practices were similar in age and gender, but a higher proportion were M?ori and more were from more deprived areas. Patients made a similar number of visits as people in non-rural areas, although visits were slightly shorter in rural practices and more were funded by Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC). Rural patients presented slightly fewer reasons or problems per visit. Injury and respiratory conditions were more frequent problems managed at rural practices. Patient management was generally similar regardless of location, although laboratory tests and other investigations were ordered less frequently at rural practices. Prescriptions and non-drug treatments were also provided slightly less often at rural practices and follow-up was arranged less frequently.
Aside from a few key differences, the characteristics of patients, practitioners, and practice were generally similar between rural and non-rural locations during normal hours in 2001/2. With some notable exceptions, patient problems and their management were also broadly consistent. Further work is needed to develop an ongoing database of patient morbidity encountered in primary care, ideally with more information about the complexity of each encounter and the nature of after-hours work.
描述2001/2年度在正常工作时间前往新西兰乡村全科诊所就诊的患者特征、他们所呈现的问题以及接受的治疗。并与前往非乡村诊所就诊的患者进行比较。
作为2001/2年度开展的全国初级医疗保健调查的一部分,从新西兰全科医生的分层随机调查中收集数据。
乡村和非乡村全科诊所的回复率很高(72%)。按地区比较诊所特征,乡村地区全职等效医生较少,诊疗费用较低,诊疗量略高,提供的服务更多(如夜间手术、群体健康促进以及参与产妇护理的医生)。与城市同行相比,更多乡村从业者毕业于海外,但其他特征相似。前往乡村诊所就诊的患者在年龄和性别上相似,但毛利人比例更高,且更多来自贫困地区。乡村患者就诊次数与非乡村地区的人相似,不过乡村诊所的就诊时间略短,且更多由事故赔偿公司(ACC)资助。乡村患者每次就诊提出的理由或问题略少。损伤和呼吸道疾病是乡村诊所处理的更常见问题。无论地点如何,患者治疗总体相似,不过乡村诊所安排实验室检查和其他调查的频率较低。乡村诊所开处方和提供非药物治疗的频率也略低,安排随访的频率也较低。
除了一些关键差异外,2001/2年度正常工作时间内,乡村和非乡村地区的患者、从业者及诊所特征总体相似。除了一些显著例外,患者问题及其治疗也大致一致。需要进一步开展工作,建立一个持续更新的初级保健中患者发病率数据库,理想情况下包含更多关于每次诊疗复杂性及非工作时间工作性质的信息。