首页> 外文期刊>International Journal of Population Data Science >Measuring equity in per capita primary care investment in Ontario: Challenges for data linkage and analysis
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Measuring equity in per capita primary care investment in Ontario: Challenges for data linkage and analysis

机译:衡量安大略省人均初级保健投资的公平性:数据链接和分析面临的挑战

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IntroductionFifteen years ago almost all primary care physicians (PCPs) were paid fee-for-service. Now, many physicians receive other payments as well, including capitation payments, incentives and bonuses and funding for other health professionals. It is challenging to track these changes in primary care payment and understand how they relate to individual patients. Objectives and ApproachThe objectives of this study were to assess changes in PCP payments from 2002/03 to 2011/12 and examine differences in per capita investment by urban-rural status, recent arrival (proxy for immigrant status) and income quintile. This required a three-step approach: assigning payments to physicians, assigning patients to physicians and then apportioning the payments by patient. Payments were apportioned based on the type of payment and how the data were captured. For example, capitation payments were paid monthly, but without any detail as to which patients they were for, so all capitation payments were summed and apportioned among all rostered patients. ResultsAll PCPs for whom we had payment data and to whom patients could be assigned were included. Three types of physician-patient 'relationships' were identified: the patient was on the physician's formal roster; the patient was 'virtually' rostered to the physician who provided the plurality of their care; or the patient was part of the physician's overall panel, which includes all patients seen during the year, rostered and not. The type of relationship determined which payment were allocated to each patient. When the $3.5B in payments were apportioned and different populations compared, we found inequities in new primary care investment by income, immigrant status and rurality. For example, we found a disproportionate investment in interdisciplinary teams for non-immigrant Ontarians living in more well-off suburban areas. Conclusion/ImplicationsEstimating per capita primary care investment is a challenging but worthwhile undertaking. The results of this study suggest that the Government of Ontario should facilitate increased participation in new primary care models by immigrants and people living in major urban centres.
机译:简介15年前,几乎所有的初级保健医生(PCP)均获得按服务付费。现在,许多医生也收到其他付款,包括人头费,奖励和奖金以及其他医疗专业人员的资金。跟踪初级保健支付中的这些变化并了解它们与各个患者之间的关系是一项挑战。目的和方法这项研究的目的是评估2002/03年至2011/12年间PCP支付的变化,并检查城乡状况,最近到来(移民身份的代表)和收入五分位数的人均投资差异。这需要三步方法:将费用分配给医生,将患者分配给医生,然后按患者分配付款。根据付款类型以及如何捕获数据来分配付款。例如,人头费是每月支付的,但是没有关于他们所针对的患者的任何详细信息,因此所有人头费被汇总并分摊到所有名册患者中。结果包括所有我们拥有付款数据并可以分配患者的PCP。确定了三种类型的医患关系:患者在医师正式名册上;该患者被“虚拟地”列入了提供多种护理的医师名单;或该患者属于医师总体面板的一部分,其中包括一年中见过的所有患者,有名无实。关系的类型确定向每个患者分配哪种付款。当对$ 3.5B的付款进行分摊并比较了不同的人群时,我们发现按收入,移民身份和农村地区划分的新的初级保健投资不平等。例如,我们发现跨学科团队对居住在较富裕郊区的非移民安大略人的投资不成比例。结论/意义估算人均初级保健投资是一项挑战,但值得进行。这项研究的结果表明,安大略省政府应促进移民和居住在主要城市中心地区的人们更多地参与新的初级保健模式。

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