Canizares Mayilee, Gignac Monique, Hogg-Johnson Sheilah, Glazier Richard H, Badley Elizabeth M
Institute of Medical Science, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada Krembil Research Institute, University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Krembil Research Institute, University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada Institute for Work and Health, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
BMJ Open. 2016 Sep 29;6(9):e013276. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-013276.
In light of concerns for meeting the provision of healthcare services given the large numbers of ageing baby boomers, we compared the trajectories of primary care and specialist services use across the lifecourse of 5 birth cohorts and examined factors associated with birth cohort differences.
Longitudinal panel.
Canadian National Population Health Survey (1994-2011).
Sample of 10 186 individuals aged 20-69 years in 1994-1995 and who were from 5 birth cohorts: Generation X (Gen X; born: 1965-1974), Younger Baby Boomers (born: 1955-1964), Older Baby Boomers (born: 1945-1954), World War II (born: 1935-1944) and pre-World War II (born: 1925-1934).
Use of primary care and specialist services.
Although the overall pattern suggested less use of physician services by each successive recent cohort, this blinded differences in primary and specialist care use by cohort. Multilevel analyses comparing cohorts showed that Gen Xers and younger boomers, particularly those with multimorbidity, were less likely to use primary care than earlier cohorts. In contrast, specialist use was higher in recent cohorts, with Gen Xers having the highest specialist use. These increases were explained by the increasing levels of multimorbidity. Education, income, having a regular source of care, sedentary lifestyle and obesity were significantly associated with physician services use, but only partially contributed to cohort differences.
The findings suggest a shift from primary care to specialist care among recent cohorts, particularly for those with multimorbidity. This is of concern given policies to promote primary care services to prevent and manage chronic conditions. There is a need for policies to address important generational differences in healthcare preferences and the balance between primary and specialty care to ensure integration and coordination of healthcare delivery.
鉴于大量婴儿潮一代步入老年,人们对医疗服务供给颇为担忧,我们比较了5个出生队列在其生命历程中初级保健和专科服务的使用轨迹,并研究了与出生队列差异相关的因素。
纵向面板研究。
加拿大全国人口健康调查(1994 - 2011年)。
1994 - 1995年年龄在20 - 69岁的10186名个体样本,他们来自5个出生队列:X一代(出生于1965 - 1974年)、较年轻婴儿潮一代(出生于1955 - 1964年)、较年长婴儿潮一代(出生于1945 - 1954年)、二战一代(出生于1935 - 1944年)和二战前一代(出生于1925 - 1934年)。
初级保健和专科服务的使用情况。
尽管总体模式显示,较近的每个队列使用医生服务的频率较低,但这掩盖了各队列在初级保健和专科保健使用上的差异。比较队列的多水平分析表明,X一代和较年轻的婴儿潮一代,尤其是患有多种疾病的人群,比早期队列使用初级保健的可能性更小。相比之下,较近队列中专科服务的使用频率更高,X一代专科服务的使用频率最高。这些增加是由多种疾病发生率的上升所解释的。教育程度、收入、有固定的医疗来源、久坐不动的生活方式和肥胖与医生服务的使用显著相关,但仅部分导致了队列差异。
研究结果表明,较近队列中存在从初级保健向专科保健的转变,尤其是对于患有多种疾病的人群。鉴于推广初级保健服务以预防和管理慢性病的政策,这令人担忧。需要制定政策来解决医疗保健偏好方面重要的代际差异以及初级保健和专科保健之间的平衡问题,以确保医疗服务的整合与协调。