| Literature DB >> 19296846 |
André Busato1, Pius Matter, Beat Künzi.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Questions about the existence of supplier-induced demand emerge repeatedly in discussions about governing Swiss health care. This study therefore aimed to evaluate the interrelationship between structural factors of supply and the volume of services that are provided by primary care physicians in Switzerland.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19296846 PMCID: PMC2664802 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-9-49
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Structure of hierarchical linear models
| Type of variable | Description |
| Number of annual physician consultations | |
| - Level I (physician) | Model 1: Number of patients treated in 2004 a. |
| Model 2: 4 indicator variables (P_Q1 – P_Q4) representing quartiles of the number of patients treated in 2004a | |
| Physician gender | |
| Physician age | |
| Professional qualificationb | |
| Average patient age | |
| Proportion of female patient consultations | |
| - Level II (service area) | Number of PCP's per 10,000 inhabitants |
| Number of specialistsc per 10,000 inhabitants | |
| Presence of a hospital providing ambulatory services (coded as a binary variable with 0 for no hospital and 1 for at least one hospital). | |
| Number of deaths per 1000 inhabitants (mortality) | |
a See Table 4 for results of model 1 and 2.
b Board certification of the Swiss Medical Association (family medicine, general internal medicine, general practitioners without board certification).
c Physicians providing ambulatory care but not classified as primary care provider (board certification in other medical disciplines)
Figure 1Graph displaying treatment intensity against number of patients.