Dalla Lana School of Public Health, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, Canada; Canadian Centre for Health Economics, Toronto, Canada; Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences, Toronto, Canada.
Dalla Lana School of Public Health, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, Canada; Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences, Toronto, Canada; Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Health Policy. 2020 Jul;124(7):743-750. doi: 10.1016/j.healthpol.2020.04.013. Epub 2020 May 26.
Countries throughout the world have been experimenting with new models to deliver primary care. We investigated physician group, physician and patient characteristics associated with voluntarily joining team-based primary care in Ontario.
This cross-sectional study linked provincial administrative datasets to form data extractions of interest over time with the earliest in 2005 and the latest in 2013. We generated mixed, generalized chi-square and multivariate models to compare the characteristics of teams and non-teams, both with blended capitation reimbursement, and to examine characteristics associated with joining a team.
Having more physicians per group, being a female physician, having more years under the blended capitation model, having more patients in the lowest income quintile and more patients residing in rural areas were positively associated with joining a team. Being a female physician and having more patients who are males, recent immigrants and living in rural areas were positively associated with the outcome of joining teams in the late phase.
Our study findings indicate that there are differences in physician group, physician and patient characteristics when comparing teams to non-teams. Other jurisdictions aiming to expand physician participation in interprofessional care should note those factors. Researchers looking to understand the impact of team-based care should be aware of pre-existing differences and the need to address selection bias associated with participation in team-based care.
世界各国一直在尝试新的模式来提供初级保健。我们调查了与安大略省自愿加入基于团队的初级保健相关的医生群体、医生和患者特征。
这项横断面研究将省级行政数据集联系起来,形成随时间推移的相关数据提取,最早的是 2005 年,最晚的是 2013 年。我们生成了混合、广义卡方和多变量模型,以比较具有混合人头费报销的团队和非团队的特征,并研究与加入团队相关的特征。
每个团队的医生人数较多、医生为女性、在混合人头费模式下工作的年限较长、处于最低收入五分位数的患者较多、居住在农村地区的患者较多,与加入团队呈正相关。女性医生和更多的男性患者、新移民和居住在农村地区的患者与后期加入团队的结果呈正相关。
我们的研究结果表明,在比较团队和非团队时,医生群体、医生和患者特征存在差异。其他旨在扩大医生参与多专业护理的司法管辖区应注意这些因素。研究人员如果希望了解基于团队的护理的影响,应注意到先前存在的差异以及需要解决与参与基于团队的护理相关的选择偏差。