Skarshaug Lena Janita, Kaspersen Silje Lill, Bjørngaard Johan Håkon, Pape Kristine
Department of Public Health and Nursing, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway
Department of Public Health and Nursing, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway.
BMJ Open. 2021 Feb 16;11(2):e042391. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-042391.
Patients may benefit from continuity of care by a personal physician general practitioner (GP), but there are few studies on consequences of a break in continuity of GP. Investigate how a sudden discontinuity of GP care affects their list patients' regular GP consultations, out-of-hours consultations and acute hospital admissions, including admissions for ambulatory care sensitive conditions (ACSC).
Cohort study linking person-level national register data on use of health services and GP affiliation with data on GP activity and GP characteristics.
Primary care.
2 409 409 Norwegians assigned to the patient lists of 2560 regular GPs who, after 12 months of stable practice, had a sudden discontinuity of practice lasting two or more months between 2007 and 2017.
Monthly GP consultations, out-of-hours consultations, acute hospital admissions and ACSC admissions in periods during and 12 months after the discontinuity, compared with the 12-month period before the discontinuity using logistic regression models.
All patient age groups had a 3%-5% decreased odds of monthly regular GP consultations during the discontinuity. Odds of monthly out-of-hours consultations increased 2%-6% during the discontinuity for all adult age groups. A 7%-9% increase in odds of ACSC admissions during the period 1-6 months after discontinuity was indicated in patients over the age of 65, but in general little or no change in acute hospital admissions was observed during or after the period of discontinuity.
Modest changes in health service use were observed during and after a sudden discontinuity in practice among patients with a previously stable regular GP. Older patients seem sensitive to increased acute hospital admissions in the absence of their personal GP.
患者可能会从私人医生(全科医生,GP)提供的连续性护理中受益,但关于全科医生连续性中断后果的研究较少。调查全科医生护理的突然中断如何影响其在册患者的常规全科医生会诊、非工作时间会诊和急性住院情况,包括因非卧床护理敏感疾病(ACSC)而住院的情况。
队列研究,将关于医疗服务使用和全科医生隶属关系的个人层面国家登记数据与全科医生活动和全科医生特征数据相联系。
初级医疗。
2409409名挪威人,他们被分配到2560名常规全科医生的患者名单中,这些全科医生在经过12个月的稳定执业后,于2007年至2017年期间突然中断执业持续两个月或更长时间。
使用逻辑回归模型,将中断期间及中断后12个月内的每月全科医生会诊、非工作时间会诊、急性住院情况和ACSC住院情况,与中断前的12个月期间进行比较。
在中断期间,所有患者年龄组每月进行常规全科医生会诊的几率降低了3%-5%。在中断期间,所有成年年龄组每月非工作时间会诊的几率增加了2%-6%。65岁以上患者在中断后1-6个月期间ACSC住院几率增加了7%-9%,但在中断期间或之后,急性住院情况总体上几乎没有变化或没有变化。
在之前有稳定常规全科医生的患者中,执业突然中断期间及之后,医疗服务使用出现了适度变化。老年患者在没有私人全科医生的情况下,似乎对急性住院人数增加较为敏感。