Faculty of Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Blusson Hall, Room 11300, 8888 University Drive, Burnaby, BC, V5A 1S6, Canada.
Centre for Health Services and Policy Research, School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia, 201-2206 East Mall, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z3, Canada.
Hum Resour Health. 2021 Jul 23;19(1):92. doi: 10.1186/s12960-021-00633-9.
The retirement of a family physician can represent a challenge in accessibility and continuity of care for patients. In this population-based, longitudinal cohort study, we assess whether and how long it takes for patients to find a new majority source of primary care (MSOC) when theirs retires, and we investigate the effect of demographic and clinical characteristics on this process.
We used provincial health insurance records to identify the complete cohort of patients whose majority source of care left clinical practice in either 2007/2008 or 2008/2009 and then calculated the number of days between their last visit with their original MSOC and their first visit with their new one. We compared the clinical and sociodemographic characteristics of patients who did and did not find a new MSOC in the three years following their original physician's retirement using Chi-square and Fisher's exact test. We also used Cox proportional hazards models to determine the adjusted association between patient age, sex, socioeconomic status, location and morbidity level (measured using Johns Hopkins' Aggregated Diagnostic Groupings), and time to finding a new primary care physician. We produce survival curves stratified by patient age, sex, income and morbidity.
Fifty-four percent of patients found a new MSOC within the first 12 months following their physician's retirement. Six percent of patients still had not found a new physician after 36 months. Patients who were older and had higher levels of morbidity were more likely to find a new MSOC and found one faster than younger, healthier patients. Patients located in more urban regional health authorities also took longer to find a new MSOC compared to those in rural areas.
Primary care physician retirements represent a potential threat to accessibility; patients followed in this study took more than a year on average to find a new MSOC after their physician retired. Providing programmatic support to retiring physicians and their patients, as well as addressing shortages of longitudinal primary care more broadly could help to ensure smoother retirement transitions.
家庭医生退休可能会给患者的可及性和连续性护理带来挑战。在这项基于人群的纵向队列研究中,我们评估了当他们的主要初级保健提供者(MSOC)退休时,患者找到新的主要初级保健提供者需要多长时间,以及患者的人口统计学和临床特征对这一过程的影响。
我们使用省级健康保险记录来确定 2007/2008 年或 2008/2009 年离开临床实践的其主要照顾者的完整患者队列,然后计算他们最后一次就诊与新的主要照顾者之间的天数。我们比较了在其原始医生退休后的三年内找到新的 MSOC 的患者和未找到新的 MSOC 的患者的临床和社会人口统计学特征,使用卡方检验和 Fisher 精确检验。我们还使用 Cox 比例风险模型来确定患者年龄、性别、社会经济地位、地理位置和发病水平(使用约翰霍普金斯综合诊断分组衡量)与找到新的初级保健医生之间的调整关联。我们根据患者年龄、性别、收入和发病水平生成生存曲线。
54%的患者在医生退休后的第一个 12 个月内找到了新的 MSOC。6%的患者在 36 个月后仍未找到新医生。年龄较大和发病水平较高的患者更有可能找到新的 MSOC,并且比年龄较小、健康状况较好的患者找到新的 MSOC 的速度更快。与农村地区相比,位于更多城市区域卫生当局的患者找到新的 MSOC 所需的时间也更长。
初级保健医生退休对可及性构成潜在威胁;在这项研究中,患者在其医生退休后平均需要一年多的时间才能找到新的 MSOC。为即将退休的医生及其患者提供计划支持,并更广泛地解决长期初级保健短缺问题,可能有助于确保更顺利的退休过渡。