| Literature DB >> 25826616 |
Xiaolin Wei1, Haitao Li1, Nan Yang1, Samuel Y S Wong1, Onikepe Owolabi2, Jianguang Xu3, Leiyu Shi4, Jinling Tang1, Donald Li5, Sian M Griffiths1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Primary care is the key element of health reform in China. The objective of this study was to compare patient assessed quality of public primary care between Hong Kong, a city with established primary care environment influenced by its colonial history, and Shanghai, a city leading primary care reform in Mainland China; and to measure the equity of care in the two cities.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25826616 PMCID: PMC4380428 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0121269
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Socioeconomic and demographic characteristics, and health care measures of the public primary care users in Hong Kong and Shanghai.
| Characteristics | Hong Kong (%) (n = 391) | Shanghai (%) (n = 725) | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Gender | <0.001 | ||
| Female | 219(56.0) | 497(68.6) | |
| Male | 172(44.0) | 228(31.4) | |
| Age group | <0.001 | ||
| ≤44 | 89(22.8) | 39(5.4) | |
| 45~59 | 119(30.4) | 214(29.5) | |
| ≥60 | 183(46.8) | 472(65.1) | |
| Self-reported health status | <0.001 | ||
| Good and above | 198(50.6) | 174(24.0) | |
| Fair | 170(43.5) | 449(61.9) | |
| Poor | 23(5.9) | 102(14.1) | |
| Having any physical, mental or emotional problem | <0.001 | ||
| Yes | 122(31.2) | 600(82.8) | |
| No | 269(68.8) | 125(17.2) | |
|
| |||
| Education | 0.001 | ||
| College and above | 72(18.4) | 151(20.8) | |
| High school or equivalent | 108(27.6) | 267(36.8) | |
| Middle school and below | 211(54.0) | 307(42.3) | |
| Occupation | 0.008 | ||
| Have a job | 69(17.6) | 85(11.7) | |
| Do not have a job | 322(82.4) | 640(88.3) | |
| Household income | <0.001 | ||
| Below poverty line | 99(25.3) | 111(15.3) | |
| Between poverty line and median | 114(29.2) | 519(71.6) | |
| Above median | 45(11.5) | 72(9.9) | |
| Reject to answer | 133(34.0) | 23(3.2) | |
| Health insurance | <0.001 | ||
| Yes | 52(13.3) | 697(96.1) | |
| No | 339(86.7) | 28(3.9) | |
|
| |||
| Number of visits in the last year, n(%) | <0.001 | ||
| ≤3 visits | 170(43.5) | 67(9.2) | |
| 4~6 visits | 155(39.6) | 57(7.9) | |
| ≥7 visits | 66(16.9) | 601(82.9) | |
| Length of time with the health facility | <0.001 | ||
| ≤1 year | 23(5.9) | 57(7.9) | |
| 1~2 years | 27(6.9) | 92(12.7) | |
| 3~4 years | 27(6.9) | 94(13.0) | |
| ≥5 years | 314(80.3) | 482(66.5) | |
1. Chi-square test was used to examine the differences between the participants from the two cities using relative number.
Individual and total primary care attributes scores reported by respondents in Hong Kong and Shanghai.
| Attributes | Hong Kong (SD) | Shanghai (SD) | Adjusted city effect (95%CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
| First contact-utilization | 3.15(0.84) | 2.54(0.58) | 0.757(0.647,0.866) |
| First contact-accessibility | 1.59(0.49) | 2.15(0.45) | -0.635(-0.709, -0.562) |
| Continuity of care | 2.33(0.60) | 3.10(0.58) | -0.715(-0.811, -0.620) |
| Coordination of services | 2.67(0.67) | 2.40(0.61) | 0.225(0.121,0.329) |
| Coordination of information | 2.84(0.57) | 3.64(0.48) | -0.704(-0.788, -0.620) |
| Comprehensiveness-service availability | 2.43(0.75) | 3.31(0.50) | -1.008(-1.106, -0.910) |
| Comprehensiveness-service provided | 2.11(0.70) | 2.40(0.61) | -0.296(-0.402, -0.191) |
| Familycenteredness | 2.49(0.80) | 2.89(0.84) | -0.466(-0.600, -0.332) |
| Communityorientation | 1.90(0.60) | 2.05(0.73) | -0.166(-0.279, -0.053) |
| Cultural competence | 1.90(0.75) | 2.72(1.13) | -0.889(-1.055, -0.723) |
| Totalscore | 23.40(3.18) | 27.20(3.72) | -3.898(-4.479, -3.317) |
1. Compared with that of Hong Kong using independent two-sample t-test
* p<0.05
** p<0.01
*** p<0.001
2. The city effect was examined using multiple linear regression models, where the dependent variable is the domain score, while independent variables are gender, age, education, occupation, household income, health status and presence of chronic diseases
# p<0.05
## p<0.01
### p<0.001;
β is calculated with Shanghai as reference; CI = confidence interval.
Fig 1Individual attributes scores of the Primary Care Assessment Tools reported by the respondents in Hong Kong and Shanghai in 2011.
Mean scores of the selected items under each domain reported by respondents in Hong Kong and Shanghai.
| Items | Hong Kong(SD) | Shanghai(SD) | Adjusted city effect (95%CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| B1. When you need a regular general checkup, do you go to your PCP before going somewhere else? | 2.82(1.11) | 2.42(1.30) | 0.400(0.197,0.603) |
| B3. When you have to see a specialist, does your PCP have to approve or give you a referral? | 3.34(0.94) | 1.65(0.48) | 1.974(1.875,2.073) |
|
| |||
| C3. When your PCP is open and you get sick, would someone from there see you the same day? | 2.55(0.99) | 3.69(0.46) | -1.056(-1.158, -0.954) |
| C5. When your PCP is closed, is there a phone number you can call when you get sick? | 1.21(0.54) | 1.69(0.87) | -0.629(-0.755, -0.503) |
|
| |||
| D1. When you go to your PCP’s, are you taken care of by the same doctor or nurse each time? | 1.96(0.97) | 2.91(0.93) | -0.805(-0.959, -0.651) |
| D7. Does your PCP know you very well as a person, rather than as someone with a medical problem? | 1.86(1.02) | 2.58(1.01) | -0.826(-0.992, -0.660) |
|
| |||
| E10. Did your PCP write down any information for the specialist about the reason for the visit? | 2.86(0.83) | 2.48(0.78) | 0.379(0.248,0.510) |
|
| |||
| F1. When you go to your PCP, do you bring any of your own medical records, such as shot records or reports of medical care you had in the past? | 2.04(1.08) | 3.97(0.25) | -1.792(-1.901, -1.684) |
|
| |||
| G8. Counseling for mental health problems | 2.01(0.98) | 2.82(0.73) | -1.018(-1.153, -0.883) |
| G10. Sewing up a cut that needs stitches | 2.46(1.12) | 3.71(0.66) | -1.352(-1.491, -1.212) |
|
| |||
| H1. Advice about healthy foods and unhealthy foods or getting enough sleep | 2.44(1.12) | 3.04(1.06) | -0.556(-0.733, -0.380) |
| H5. Advice about appropriate exercise for you | 2.33(1.13) | 2.84(1.08) | -0.403(-0.581, -0.225) |
| H7. Checking on and discussing the medications you are taking | 2.53(1.07) | 3.22(0.97) | -0.576(-0.741, -0.411) |
|
| |||
| I1. Does your PCP ask you about your ideas and opinions when planning treatment and care for you or a family member? | 2.31(1.06) | 3.39(0.89) | -1.131(-1.287, -0.975) |
|
| |||
| J1. Does anyone at your PCP’s office ever make home visits? | 1.16(0.53) | 1.50(0.86) | -0.410(-0.535, -0.285) |
|
| |||
| K3. Would you recommend your PCP to someone who uses folk medicine, such as herbs or homemade medicines, or has special beliefs about health care? | 1.79(0.86) | 2.64(1.23) | -0.981(-1.164, -0.798) |
1. Compared with that of Hong Kong using independent two-sample t-test
* p<0.05
** p<0.01
*** p<0.001
2. The city effect was examined using multiple linear regression models, where the dependent variable is the item score, while independent variables are gender, age, education, occupation, household income, health status and presence of chronic diseases;
# p<0.05
## p<0.01
### p<0.001
β is calculated with Shanghai as reference; CI = confidence interval
Individual and total primary care attributes scores (SD, standard deviations) reported by respondents with different household income levels in Hong Kong and Shanghai.
| Attributes | Hong Kong | Shanghai | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low | Middle | High | Low | Middle | High | |
| First contact-utilization | 3.20(0.76) | 3.23(0.78) | 3.27(0.74) | 2.68(0.55) |
|
|
| First contact-accessibility | 1.56(0.42) | 1.52(0.46) | 1.62(0.48) | 2.19(0.45) | 2.12(0.44) | 2.30(0.48) |
| Continuity of care | 2.37(0.58) | 2.29(0.56) | 2.43(0.62) | 3.02(0.58) | 3.13(0.57) | 3.11(0.55) |
| Coordination of services | 2.76(0.70) |
| 2.76(0.66) | 2.45(0.53) | 2.37(0.63) | 2.41(0.63) |
| Coordination of information | 2.84(0.53) | 2.88(0.53) |
| 3.61(0.55) | 3.63(0.47) | 3.74(0.40) |
| Comprehensiveness- service availability | 2.34(0.79) | 2.39(0.81) | 2.44(0.73) | 3.26(0.57) | 3.32(0.50) | 3.34(0.41) |
| Comprehensiveness-service provided | 2.06(0.66) | 2.14(0.68) | 2.10(0.63) | 2.44(0.62) | 2.40(0.61) | 2.40(0.56) |
| Familycenteredness | 2.18(0.81) |
|
| 2.78(0.84) | 2.90(0.84) |
|
| Communityorientation | 1.80(0.67) |
| 1.96(0.53) | 2.07(0.72) | 2.04(0.75) | 2.14(0.62) |
| Cultural competence | 1.90(0.76) | 1.88(0.76) | 1.98(0.76) | 2.68(1.00) | 2.69(1.16) | 2.93(1.02) |
| Totalscore | 23.02(3.36) | 23.52(2.86) |
| 27.19(3.67) | 27.14(3.76) | 27.84(3.30) |
ANOVA tests were conducted for each city. Respondents with low income were used as reference group. Statistically significant results were bolded.
*p<0.05
**p<0.01
***p<0.001.
Multiple linear regression analysis results of total primary care score in each primary care setting, Shanghai and Hong Kong.
| Independent variables | Total primary care score, β(95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|
| Hong Kong (n = 391) | Shanghai (n = 725) | |
|
| ||
| Gender | ||
| Female | ref | ref |
| Male | -0.206(-0.861, 0.449) | -0.054(-0.656, 0.547) |
| Age group | ||
| ≤44 | ref | ref |
| 45~59 | 0.455(-0.504, 1.414) |
|
| ≥60 | 0.488(-0.524, 1.500) |
|
| Self reported health status | ||
| Good and above | ref | ref |
| Fair | -0.258(-1.006, 0.490) | 0.172(-0.520, 0.865) |
| Poor | -0.513(-1.963, 0.938) | -0.220(-1.174, 0.733) |
| Having any physical, mental or emotional problem | ||
| Yes | ref | ref |
| No | 0.031(-0.715, 0.777) | 0.624(-0.235, 1.484) |
|
| ||
| Education | ||
| Middle school and below | ref | ref |
| High school or equivalent | -0.543(-1.382, 0.295) | -0.252(-0.870, 0.366) |
| College and above | -0.252(-1.233, 0.730) |
|
| Occupation | ||
| Have a job | ref | ref |
| Do not have a job | -0.212(-1.141, 0.717) | -0.288(-1.250, 0.674) |
| Household income | ||
| Low | ref | ref |
| Middle | 0.775(-0.156, 1.707) | 0.130(-0.633, 0.893) |
| High |
| 1.026(-0.097, 2.150) |
| Health insurance | ||
| No | ref | ref |
| Yes | 0.005(-0.970, 0.980) | -0.190(-1.694, 1.313) |
|
| ||
| Number of visits in the last year, n(%) | ||
| ≤3 visits | ref | ref |
| 4~6 visits | 0.059(-0.701, 0.820) | 0.721(-0.593, 2.035) |
| ≥7 visits |
|
|
| Length of time with the health facility | ||
| ≤1 year | ref | ref |
| 1~2 years | 0.586(-1.221, 2.394) | -0.722(-1.954, 0.510) |
| 3~4 years | 0.105(-1.684, 1.894) | -1.168(-2.418, 0.083) |
| ≥5 years | 0.076(-1.291, 1.442) | 0.663(-0.415, 1.741) |
# Ref = reference group;
*p<0.05
**p<0.01
CI = Confidence interval