| Literature DB >> 29786762 |
Markus Gnädinger1, Lilli Herzig2,3, Alessandro Ceschi4,5, Dieter Conen6, Alfred Staehelin7,3, Marco Zoller7, Milo A Puhan8.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To provide estimates of the prevalence of chronic conditions in Swiss primary care.Entities:
Keywords: Care dependency; Drug treatment; Hospitalization; Morbidity; Primary health care; Switzerland
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29786762 PMCID: PMC6245242 DOI: 10.1007/s00038-018-1114-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Public Health ISSN: 1661-8556 Impact factor: 3.380
Comparison of the Sentinella versus Swiss Medical Association (FMH) physician collectives (MIPC study, Switzerland 2015)
| Parameter | FMH collective 2014 | |
|---|---|---|
| Number of physicians | 180 | 6929 |
| Gender | ||
| Male | 71% | 66% |
| Female | 29% | 34% |
| Age categories | ||
| < 40 years | 7% | 9% |
| 40–49 years | 24% | 25% |
| 50–59 years | 37% | 34% |
| 60 years and older | 32% | 32% |
| Specialty | ||
| GP | 82% | 86% |
| PED | 18% | 14% |
aComparisons of Sentinella and Swiss Medical Association (FMH) groups by Chi square were not significant. The two practices that did not report morbidity data were also included in this table, because they were otherwise part of the Sentinella physician collective
Fig. 1Thurgau Morbidity Index* (TMI) values, percent % (MIPC study, Switzerland 2015). *The index values denote: “0” healthy, “1” premorbid, “2” one or two mild-to-moderate conditions, “3” three and more mild-to-moderate conditions, “4” one severe and less than three mild-to-moderate conditions, “5” one severe and three or more mild-to-moderate conditions, “6” two or more severe conditions. Graduations denote the entire class
Fig. 2Number of prescribed drugs* regularly taken, percent values (%) (MIPC study, Switzerland 2015). *Graduations denote the entire class
Logistic regression using hospitalization in the previous year as target variable (odds ratios of adult patients with complete records) (MIPC study, Switzerland 2015)
| Crude (mean, 95% CI) | Adjustedc (mean, 95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|
| Gendera | 0.997 (0.904–1.055), | 0.908 (0.832–0.991), |
| Age (per year) | 1.029 (1.027–1.032), | 0.994 (0.991–0.997), |
| Conditions (per naming) | 1.294 (1.274–1.315), | 1.038 (1.015–1.062), |
| Drugs (per naming) | 1.244 (1.229–1.259), | 1.031 (1.011–1.050), |
| Thurgau Morbidity Index (per grade) | 1.903 (1.849–1.958), | 1.650 (1.584–1.718), |
| Care dependencyb by | ||
| Family/proxies | 6.844 (5.914–7.920), | 2.875 (2.445–3.380), |
| Community nurse | 8.474 (7.196–9.979), | 3.219 (2.743–3.949), |
| Institution/home | 4.297 (3.725–4.958), | 1.515 (1.284–1.788), |
a(1 = male, 2 = female)
bCompared to none, n = 18,297
cAdjusted for all other variables in the table
Fig. 3Care dependency* by age groups (percent values %, adult patients only) (MIPC study, Switzerland 2015). *Graduations denote the entire class
Fig. 4Comparison of Thurgau Morbidity Index (≥ 3) or chronic conditions (≥ 3) with literaturea (Fortin et al. 2012, see figure 3 of that article, with permission) (MIPC study, Switzerland 2015). aThis review collected consultation-derived information in primary care settings from several studies and compared the prevalence of three or more chronic conditions by age groups. However, the Swiss FIRE data (Rizza et al. 2012) were not consultation- but registry-based