Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To describe the variability in hospitalisation rates because of the most common ambulatory care sensitive conditions (ACSC), by town and gender; b) to describe the influence on these rates of the characteristics of primary care (reformed or non-reformed model and kind of centre), the health level of the population, geographical accessibility and other factors of a social and economic nature. DESIGN: Observational, cross-sectional study of hospital discharges and ecological study for the analysis of rates between towns. MAIN MEASUREMENTS: The rates of hospitalisation by gender for each ACSC (1997-1999), standardised for age through the indirect method by calculating the standardised rate ratios (SRR). The multivariate analysis used Poisson regression. RESULTS: In the diagnoses studied, 41% of the towns had the same number of cases observed and expected for hospitalisation of men; and 65%, for women. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in men and heart failure in women were the illnesses that most varied. Hospitalisation rates for most illnesses were higher in towns without a health centre or with a non-reformed model, with over 3000 inhabitants and closer to hospital, although distance from the hospital was an influential factor only in bigger towns. CONCLUSIONS: There is variability between towns in hospitalisation rates for the most common ACSC; b) the differences in hospitalisation rates for the ACSC studied are linked to organisational features of primary care, the size of the town and the distance from the hospital.