Department of Family Medicine, Dalhousie University Faculty of Medicine, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada.
BMJ Open. 2023 Dec 12;13(12):e076917. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-076917.
Many Canadians struggle to access the primary care they need while at the same time primary care providers report record levels of stress and overwork. There is an urgent need to understand factors contributing to the gap between a growing per-capita supply of primary care providers and declines in the availability of primary care services. The assumption of responsibility by primary care teams for services previously delivered on an in-patient basis, along with a rise in administrative responsibilities may be factors influencing reduced access to care.
In this mixed-methods study, our first objective is to determine how the volume of services requiring primary care coordination has changed over time in the Canadian provinces of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. We will collect quantitative administrative data to investigate how services have shifted in ways that may impact administrative workload in primary care. Our second objective is to use qualitative interviews with family physicians, nurse practitioners and administrative team members providing primary care to understand how administrative workload has changed over time. We will then identify priority issues and practical response strategies using two deliberative dialogue events convened with primary care providers, clinical and system leaders, and policy-makers.We will analyse changes in service use data between 2001/2002 and 2021/2022 using annual total counts, rates per capita, rates per primary care provider and per primary care service. We will conduct reflexive thematic analysis to develop themes and to compare and contrast participant responses reflecting differences across disciplines, payment and practice models, and practice settings. Areas of concern and potential solutions raised during interviews will inform deliberative dialogue events.
We received research ethics approval from Nova Scotia Health (#1028815). Knowledge translation will occur through dialogue events, academic papers and presentations at national and international conferences.
许多加拿大人在寻求基本医疗服务时遇到困难,而与此同时,基本医疗服务提供者报告称他们的压力和工作负荷达到了创纪录的水平。迫切需要了解导致基本医疗服务提供者人均供应量不断增加与基本医疗服务可用性下降之间差距的因素。基本医疗团队对以前在住院基础上提供的服务负责,以及行政职责的增加,可能是影响获得医疗服务机会减少的因素。
在这项混合方法研究中,我们的首要目标是确定在加拿大新斯科舍省和新不伦瑞克省,需要基本医疗协调的服务量随时间的变化情况。我们将收集定量行政数据,以调查服务是如何发生变化的,这些变化可能会影响基本医疗行政工作负荷。我们的第二个目标是使用与提供基本医疗服务的家庭医生、护士从业者和行政团队成员进行定性访谈,了解行政工作负荷随时间的变化情况。然后,我们将使用两次与基本医疗服务提供者、临床和系统领导者以及政策制定者举行的协商对话活动,确定优先问题和实际应对策略。我们将使用年度总数、人均率、每基本医疗服务提供者和每基本医疗服务的比率,分析 2001/2002 年至 2021/2022 年服务使用数据的变化情况。我们将进行反思性主题分析,以制定主题,并比较和对比反映不同学科、支付和实践模式以及实践环境差异的参与者的回应。访谈中提出的关注领域和潜在解决方案将为协商对话活动提供信息。
我们从新斯科舍省卫生署(#1028815)获得了研究伦理批准。知识转化将通过对话活动、学术论文和在国家和国际会议上的演讲进行。