Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Community Medicine, University of Tromsø, Tromsø, Norway.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2013 Apr 23;13:147. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-13-147.
Referral rates of general practitioners (GPs) are an important determinant of secondary care utilization. The variation in these rates across GPs is considerable, and cannot be explained by patient morbidity alone. The main objective of this study was to assess the GPs' referral rate to secondary care in Norway, any associations between the referral decision and patient, GP, health care characteristics and who initiated the referring issue in the consultation.
The probabilities of referral to secondary care and/or radiological examination were examined in 100 consecutive consultations of 44 randomly chosen Norwegian GPs. The GPs recorded whether the issue of referral was introduced, who introduced it and if the patient was referred. Multilevel and naive multivariable logistic regression analyses were performed to explore associations between the probability of referral and patient, GP and health care characteristics.
Of the 4350 consultations included, 13.7% (GP range 4.0%-28.0%) of patients were referred to secondary somatic and psychiatric care. Female GPs referred significantly more frequently than male GPs (16.0% versus 12.6%, adjusted odds ratio, AOR, 1.25), specialists in family medicine less frequently than their counterparts (12.5% versus 14.9%, AOR 0.76) and salaried GPs more frequently than private practitioners (16.2% versus 12.1%, AOR 1.36).In 4.2% (GP range 0%-12.9%) of the consultations, patients were referred to radiological examination. Specialists in family medicine, salaried GPs and GPs with a Norwegian medical degree referred significantly more frequently to radiological examination than their counterparts (AOR 1.93, 2.00 and 1.73, respectively).The issue of referral was introduced in 23% of the consultations, and in 70.6% of these cases by the GP. The high referrers introduced the referral issue significantly more frequently and also referred a significantly larger proportion when the issue was introduced.
The main finding of the present study was a high overall referral rate, and a striking range among the GPs. Male GPs and specialists in family medicine referred significantly less frequently to secondary care, but the latter referred more frequently to radiological examination. Our findings indicate that intervention on high referrers is a potential area for quality improvement, and there is a need to explore the referral decision process itself.
全科医生(GP)的转诊率是影响二级医疗利用率的一个重要决定因素。不同 GP 之间的转诊率差异很大,不能仅用患者发病率来解释。本研究的主要目的是评估挪威 GP 向二级医疗的转诊率,以及转诊决策与患者、GP、医疗保健特征之间的任何关联,以及在咨询中谁提出了转诊问题。
对 44 名随机选择的挪威 GP 的 100 例连续就诊进行了二级医疗和/或放射检查的转诊概率检查。GP 记录了转诊问题是否提出、由谁提出以及患者是否转诊。采用多水平和朴素多变量逻辑回归分析探讨转诊概率与患者、GP 和医疗保健特征之间的关系。
在纳入的 4350 次就诊中,13.7%(GP 范围 4.0%-28.0%)的患者被转诊至二级躯体和精神科。女性 GP 的转诊率明显高于男性 GP(16.0%比 12.6%,调整后的优势比,AOR,1.25),家庭医学专家的转诊率明显低于同行(12.5%比 14.9%,AOR 0.76),薪酬 GP 的转诊率明显高于私人执业者(16.2%比 12.1%,AOR 1.36)。在 4.2%(GP 范围 0%-12.9%)的就诊中,患者被转诊至放射检查。家庭医学专家、薪酬 GP 和具有挪威医学学位的 GP 进行放射检查的转诊率明显高于同行(AOR 分别为 1.93、2.00 和 1.73)。转诊问题在 23%的就诊中提出,其中 70.6%由 GP 提出。高转诊 GP 提出转诊问题的频率明显更高,当提出转诊问题时,他们转诊的比例也明显更高。
本研究的主要发现是总体转诊率较高,且 GP 之间的差异很大。男性 GP 和家庭医学专家的转诊率明显较低,但后者的放射检查转诊率较高。我们的研究结果表明,对高转诊 GP 进行干预是提高质量的一个潜在领域,需要进一步探讨转诊决策过程本身。