Institut du Savoir Montfort (Belanger, Peixoto, Bjerre); Ottawa Neighbourhood Study (Belanger, Carr), and Department of Family Medicine (Bjerre), University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ont.
CMAJ Open. 2023 May 16;11(3):E434-E442. doi: 10.9778/cmajo.20220061. Print 2023 May-Jun.
Although language concordance between patients and primary care physicians results in better quality of care and health outcomes, little research has explored inequities in travel burden to access primary care people of linguistic minority groups in Canada. We sought to investigate the travel burden of language-concordant primary care among people who speak French but not English (French-only speakers) and the general public in Ottawa, Ontario, and any inequities in access across language groups and neighbourhood ruralities.
Using a novel computational method, we estimated travel burden to language-concordant primary care for the general population and French-only speakers in Ottawa. We used language and population data from Statistics Canada's 2016 Census, neighbourhood demographics from the Ottawa Neighbourhood Study, and collected the main practice location and language of primary care physicians from the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. We measured travel burden using Valhalla, an open-source road-network analysis platform.
We included data from 869 primary care physicians and 916 855 patients. Overall, French-only speakers faced greater travel burdens than the general population to access language-concordant primary care. Median differences in travel burden were statistically significant but small (median difference in drive time 0.61 min, < 0.001, interquartile range 0.26-1.17 min), but inequities in travel burden between groups were larger among people living in rural neighbourhoods.
French-only speakers in Ottawa face modest - but statistically significant - overall inequities in travel burden when accessing primary care, compared with the general population, and higher inequities in specific neighbourhoods. Our results are of interest to policy-makers and health system planners, and our methods can be replicated and used as comparative benchmarks to quantify access disparities for other services and regions across Canada.
尽管患者与初级保健医生的语言一致会导致更好的医疗质量和健康结果,但很少有研究探讨加拿大语言少数民族群体获得初级保健的旅行负担不平等问题。我们试图调查安大略省渥太华讲法语但不讲英语的人(说法语的人)和普通大众获得语言一致的初级保健的旅行负担,以及语言群体和社区农村之间的任何获得机会的不平等。
我们使用一种新的计算方法,估计了渥太华普通大众和说法语的人获得语言一致的初级保健的旅行负担。我们使用了加拿大统计局 2016 年人口普查的语言和人口数据、渥太华邻里研究的邻里人口统计数据以及安大略省医师和外科医生学院收集的主要实践地点和初级保健医生的语言。我们使用 Valhalla(一个开源道路网络分析平台)来衡量旅行负担。
我们纳入了 869 名初级保健医生和 916855 名患者的数据。总体而言,说法语的人比普通大众在获得语言一致的初级保健方面面临更大的旅行负担。旅行负担的中位数差异具有统计学意义,但很小(驾驶时间中位数差异为 0.61 分钟,<0.001,四分位距为 0.26-1.17 分钟),但在农村社区的人群中,群体间的旅行负担不平等更大。
与普通大众相比,渥太华的说法语的人在获得初级保健方面面临适度但具有统计学意义的总体不平等,在特定社区中则面临更大的不平等。我们的研究结果引起了政策制定者和卫生系统规划者的兴趣,我们的方法可以复制并用作比较基准,以量化加拿大其他地区和服务的获得差异。