Department of Family Medicine, Primary Care Research Unit, Dalhousie University, 1465 Brenton Street, Suite 402, Halifax, NS, B3J 3T4, Canada.
Faculty of Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, Canada.
Int J Equity Health. 2022 Jun 7;21(1):80. doi: 10.1186/s12939-022-01679-4.
Strong primary care systems have been associated with improved health equity. Primary care system reforms in Canada may have had equity implications, but these have not been evaluated. We sought to determine if changes in primary care service use between 1999/2000 and 2017/2018 differ by neighbourhood income in British Columbia.
We used linked administrative databases to track annual primary care visits, continuity of care, emergency department (ED) visits, specialist referrals, and prescriptions dispensed over time. We use generalized estimating equations to examine differences in the magnitude of change by neighbourhood income quintile, adjusting for age, sex/gender, and comorbidity, and stratified by urban/rural location of residence. We also compared the characteristics of physicians providing care to people living in low- and high-income neighbourhoods at two points in time.
Between 1999/2000 and 2017/8 the average number of primary care visits per person, specialist referrals, and continuity of care fell in both urban and rural settings, while ED visits and prescriptions dispensed increased. Over this period in urban settings, primary care visits, continuity, and specialist referrals fell more rapidly in low vs. high income neighbourhoods (relative change in primary care visits: Incidence Rate Ratio (IRR) 0.881, 95% CI: 0.872, 0.890; continuity: partial regression coefficient -0.92, 95% CI: -1.18, -0.66; specialist referrals: IRR 0.711, 95%CI: 0.696, 0.726), while ED visits increased more rapidly (IRR 1.06, 95% CI: 1.03, 1.09). The percentage of physicians who provide the majority of visits to patients in neighbourhoods in the lower two income quintiles declined from 30.6% to 26.3%.
Results raise concerns that equity in access to primary care has deteriorated in BC. Reforms to primary care that fail to attend to the multidimensional needs of low-income communities may entrench existing inequities. Policies that tailor patterns of funding and allocation of resources in accordance with population needs, and that align accountability measures with equity objectives are needed as part of further reform efforts.
强大的初级保健系统与改善健康公平有关。加拿大的初级保健系统改革可能会产生公平影响,但这些影响尚未得到评估。我们试图确定不列颠哥伦比亚省的初级保健服务使用量在 1999/2000 年至 2017/2018 年间是否因社区收入而异。
我们使用链接的行政数据库来跟踪年度初级保健访问、连续护理、急诊部 (ED) 访问、专科转诊和配药情况。我们使用广义估计方程来检查按社区收入五分位数变化幅度的差异,调整年龄、性别/性别和合并症,并按城乡居住地点分层。我们还比较了在两个时间点为居住在低收入和高收入社区的人提供护理的医生的特征。
在 1999/2000 年至 2017/8 年期间,城乡地区人均初级保健就诊次数、专科转诊和连续护理均呈下降趋势,而急诊就诊和配药次数增加。在此期间,城市地区的初级保健就诊、连续性和专科转诊在低收入社区的下降速度快于高收入社区(初级保健就诊的相对变化:发病率比 (IRR) 0.881,95%CI:0.872,0.890;连续性:部分回归系数-0.92,95%CI:-1.18,-0.66;专科转诊:IRR 0.711,95%CI:0.696,0.726),而急诊就诊增加速度更快(IRR 1.06,95%CI:1.03,1.09)。为社区中收入较低的两个五分位数的患者提供大部分就诊的医生比例从 30.6%下降到 26.3%。
结果令人担忧的是,不列颠哥伦比亚省的初级保健获取公平性已经恶化。未能满足低收入社区多维需求的初级保健改革可能会使现有的不平等现象根深蒂固。需要制定政策,根据人口需求调整资金和资源配置模式,并将问责措施与公平目标保持一致,作为进一步改革努力的一部分。