Te Hikuwai Rangahau Hauora | Health Services Research Centre, Te Herenga Waka-Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand.
School of Population Health, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
PLoS One. 2023 Feb 3;18(2):e0281163. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0281163. eCollection 2023.
In Aotearoa New Zealand, being enrolled with a Primary Health Care (PHC) provider furnishes opportunities for lower cost access to PHC, preventative care and secondary health care services, and provides better continuity of care. We examine the characteristics of populations not enrolled, and whether enrolment is associated with amenable mortality.
We retrieved records of all deaths registered 2008 to 2017 in Aotearoa New Zealand, which included demographic and primary cause of death information. Deaths were classified as premature (aged under 75 years) or not, and amenable to health care intervention or not. The Primary Health Organisation (PHO) Enrolment Collection dataset provided the PHC enrolment status. Logistic regression was used to estimate the risk of amenable deaths by PHO enrolment status, adjusted for the effects of age, sex, ethnicity and deprivation.
A total of 308,628 mortality records were available. Of these, 38.2% were premature deaths, and among them 47.8% were amenable deaths. Cardiovascular diseases made up almost half of the amenable deaths. Males, youths aged 15-24 years, Pacific peoples, Māori and those living in the most socio-economically deprived areas demonstrated a higher risk of amenable mortality compared to their respective reference category. One in twenty (4.3%) people who had died had no active enrolment status in any of the calendar years in the study. The adjusted odds of amenable mortality among those not enrolled in a PHO was 39% higher than those enrolled [Odds Ratio = 1.39, 95% Confidence Interval 1.30-1.47].
Being enrolled in a PHC system is associated with a lower level of amenable mortality. Given demonstrated inequities in enrolment levels across age and ethnic groups, efforts to improve this could have significant benefits on health equity.
在新西兰,在初级卫生保健 (PHC) 提供者处登记可提供以较低成本获得 PHC、预防保健和二级保健服务的机会,并提供更好的护理连续性。我们研究了未登记人群的特征,以及登记是否与可治疗死亡率相关。
我们检索了新西兰所有在 2008 年至 2017 年期间登记的死亡记录,其中包括人口统计和主要死亡原因信息。死亡被分为过早(年龄不满 75 岁)和非过早,以及是否可通过医疗保健干预治疗。初级卫生组织 (PHO) 登记收集数据集提供了 PHC 登记状况。使用逻辑回归来估计按 PHO 登记状况分类的可治疗死亡的风险,同时调整了年龄、性别、族裔和贫困程度的影响。
共有 308628 份死亡记录可用。其中,38.2%是过早死亡,其中 47.8%是可治疗死亡。心血管疾病占可治疗死亡的近一半。男性、15-24 岁的青年、太平洋岛民、毛利人和生活在最贫困地区的人,与各自的参考类别相比,可治疗死亡率的风险更高。在研究期间的任何一个日历年内,有 1/20(4.3%)的死亡者没有任何有效的登记状态。与登记在 PHO 的人相比,未登记在 PHO 的人发生可治疗死亡率的调整后几率高出 39%[优势比=1.39,95%置信区间 1.30-1.47]。
登记在 PHC 系统中与较低的可治疗死亡率相关。鉴于在年龄和族裔群体中登记水平存在明显的不平等,努力改善这一点可能对健康公平产生重大影响。