Patient clustering in primary care settings: Outcomes and quality of care

基层医疗机构中的患者聚集:结果和医疗质量

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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine whether neighbours who share the same family physicians have better cardiovascular and health care outcomes. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study using administrative health databases. SETTING: Ontario. PARTICIPANTS: The study population included 2,690,482 adult patients cared for by 1710 family physicians. INTERVENTIONS: Adult residents of Ontario were linked to their family physicians and the geographic distance between patients in the same panel or list was calculated. Using distance between patients within a panel to stratify physicians into quintiles of panel proximity, physicians and patients from close-proximity practices were compared with those from more-distant-proximity practices. Age- and sex-standardized incidence rates and hazard ratios from cause-specific hazards regression models were determined. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The occurrence of a major cardiovascular event during a 5-year follow-up period (2008 to 2012). RESULTS: Patients of panels in the closest-proximity quintile lived an average of 3.9 km from the 10 closest patients in their panel compared with 12.4 km for the 10 closest patients of panels in the distant-proximity quintile. After adjusting for various patient and physician characteristics, patients in the most-distant-proximity practices had a 24% higher rate of cardiovascular events (adjusted hazard ratio=1.24 [95% CI 1.20 to 1.28], P<.001) than patients in the closest-proximity practices. Age- and sex-standardized all-cause mortality and total per patient health care costs were also lowest in the closest-proximity quintile. In sensitivity analyses restricted to large urban communities and to White long-term residents, results were similar. CONCLUSION: The better cardiovascular outcomes observed in close-proximity panels may be related to a previously unrecognized mechanism of social connectedness that extends the effectiveness of primary care practitioners.

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