| Literature DB >> 30519110 |
Eric I Benchimol1,2,3,4,5, M Ellen Kuenzig1,2,5, Charles N Bernstein6,7, Geoffrey C Nguyen5,8, Astrid Guttmann5,9, Jennifer L Jones10, Beth K Potter4, Laura E Targownik6,7, Christina A Catley5, Zoann J Nugent6,11, Divine Tanyingoh12,13, Nassim Mojaverian5, Fox E Underwood12,13, Shabnaz Siddiq1,2, Anthony R Otley14, Alain Bitton15, Matthew W Carroll16, Jennifer C deBruyn17, Trevor Jb Dummer18, Wael El-Matary19, Anne M Griffiths9, Kevan Jacobson20,21, Desmond Leddin10, Lisa M Lix22, David R Mack1,2,3, Sanjay K Murthy4,23, Juan Nicolás Peña-Sánchez24, Harminder Singh6,7, Gilaad G Kaplan12,13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Canada's large geographic area and low population density pose challenges in access to specialized health care for remote and rural residents. We compared health services use, surgical rate, and specialist gastroenterologist care in rural and urban inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients in Canada.Entities:
Keywords: access to care; epidemiology; health administrative data; health services research; inflammatory bowel disease; routinely collected health data
Year: 2018 PMID: 30519110 PMCID: PMC6233859 DOI: 10.2147/CLEP.S178056
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Epidemiol ISSN: 1179-1349 Impact factor: 4.790
Descriptive characteristics of rural and urban patients with IBD
| Characteristics | Alberta | Manitoba | Ontario | Overall | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rural (n=1,613) | Urban (n=6,715) | Rural (n=583) | Urban (n=1,803) | Rural (n=3,027) | Urban (n=28,138) | Rural (n=5,223) | Urban (n=36,656) | ||
| Age at diagnosis (years), mean ± SD | 42.8±18.8 | 40.3±18.8 | 42.8±18.7 | 40.6±19.2 | 45.1±18.7 | 39.8±18.8 | 44.1±18.8 | 39.9±18.8 | <0.0001 |
| Female sex, n (%) | 823 (51.0) | 3,525 (52.5) | 302 (51.8) | 281 (48.2) | 1,585 (53.4) | 14,482 (51.6) | 2,710 (51.9) | 18,288 (49.9) | 0.49 |
| Length of follow-up (years), mean ± SD | 15.2±2.0 | 15.2±2.0 | 7.4±3.5 | 7.5±3.4 | 7.1±3.5 | 7.2±3.4 | 6.7±3.3 | 7.0±3.3 | <0.0001 |
| Diagnosis, n (%) | |||||||||
| CD | 747 (46.3) | 3,039 (45.3) | 265 (45.5) | 809 (44.9) | 1,276 (42.2) | 12,767 (45.4) | 2,288 (43.8) | 16,615 (45.3) | <0.0001 |
| UC | 524 (32.5) | 2,443 (36.4) | 318 (54.6) | 994 (55.1) | 1,561 (51.6) | 13,788 (49.0) | 2,403 (46.0) | 17,225 (47.0) | |
| Unclassifiable | 342 (21.2) | 1,233 (18.4) | n/a | n/a | 190 (6.3) | 1,583 (5.6) | 532 (10.2) | 2,816 (7.7) | |
| Mean neighborhood income quintile, n (%) | |||||||||
| 1 (lowest) | 274 (17.1) | 1,486 (22.1) | 101 (17.4) | 247 (13.8) | 592 (19.6) | 4,238 (15.1) | 1,000 (18.4) | 6,317 (17.1) | <0.0001 |
| 2 | 252 (15.6) | 1,571 (23.4) | 146 (25.1) | 282 (15.8) | 649 (21.4) | 5,403 (19.2) | 1,121 (20.6) | 7,209 (19.5) | |
| 3 | 415 (25.7) | 1,275 (19.0) | 143 (24.6) | 366 (20.4) | 602 (19.9) | 5,754 (20.5) | 1,260 (23.2) | 7,328 (19.8) | |
| 4 | 310 (19.2) | 1,237 (18.4) | 124 (21.3) | 402 (22.5) | 574 (18.9) | 6,194 (22.0) | 1,047 (19.2) | 7,732 (20.9) | |
| 5 (highest) | 273 (16.9) | 1,105 (16.5) | 68 (11.7) | 494 (27.6) | 584 (19.3) | 6,496 (23.1) | 862 (15.9) | 8,235 (22.2) | |
| Unknown | 88 (5.5) | 41 (0.6) | n/a | n/a | 26 (0.86) | 53 (0.19) | 176 (3.2) | 137 (0.4) | |
Notes:
Comparing patients with rural vs urban residence.
Manitoba assigns a diagnosis of CD or UC for all patients. No patient was considered unclassifiable.
Abbreviations: CD, Crohn’s disease; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; n/a, not applicable; UC, ulcerative colitis.
Figure 1Association between rural and urban (reference) residences and IBD-specific and IBD-related outpatient visit rates (multivariable Poisson regression models).
Abbreviations: IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; IRR, incidence rate ratio; CI, confidence interval.
Figure 2Association between rural and urban (reference) residences and IBD-specific and IBD-related hospitalization rates (multivariable negative binomial regression models). Bolded values represent meta-analysis results.
Abbreviations: IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; IRR, incidence rate ratio; CI, confidence interval.
Figure 3Association between rural and urban (reference) residences and risk of IBD-specific and IBD-related hospitalization (multivariable Cox proportional hazard models). Bolded values represent meta-analysis results.
Abbreviations: IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; IRR, incidence rate ratio.
Figure 4(A) Likelihood of resection or colectomy in rural and urban CD patients and (B) likelihood of colectomy in rural and urban UC patients.
Abbreviations: CD, Crohn’s disease; UC, ulcerative colitis.
Figure 5Association between rural and urban (reference) residences and prediagnostic lag time (multivariable Cox proportional hazard models). Bolded values represent meta-analysis results.
Abbreviation: IBD, inflammatory bowel disease.
Figure 6Association between rural and urban (reference) residences and likelihood of ever having seen a gastroenterologist for IBD-specific or IBD-related care (multivariable logistic regression models). Bolded values represent meta-analysis results.
Abbreviation: IBD, inflammatory bowel disease.
Figure 7Heat map demonstrating that higher proportion of IBD care provided by gastroenterologists (darker colors) was more likely to be located in urban regions (outlined boxes).
Abbreviation: GI, gastroenterologist; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease.
Models to determine whether specialist care provision mediated the relationship between rural/urban residence and disparities in health services utilization in Ontario IBD patients
| Health services measure | Original model, adjusted IRR/OR/HR (95% CI) | Specialist care definition # 1, adjusted IRR/OR/HR (95% CI) | Specialist care definition # 2, adjusted IRR/OR/HR (95% CI) | Specialist care definition # 3, adjusted IRR/OR/HR (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Outpatient visit rate | ||||
| IBD-specific | 0.97 (0.93–1.00) | 0.97 (0.93–1.00) | 1.005 (0.97–1.04) | |
| IBD-related | 0.92 (0.89 | 0.92 (0.89 | 0.95 (0.91 | |
| Hospitalization rate | ||||
| IBD-specific | 1.04 (0.97–1.11) | 1.01 (0.95–1.08) | 1.00 (0.94–1.07) | |
| IBD-related | 1.06 (0.99–1.12) | 1.02 (0.96–1.09) | 1.01 (0.95–1.07) | |
| Risk of hospitalization | ||||
| IBD-specific | 1.01 (0.95–1.07) | 0.97 (0.92–1.03) | 0.97 (0.91–1.03) | 1.04 (0.98–1.10) |
| IBD-related | 1.03 (0.98–1.09) | 0.99 (0.94–1.05) | 0.98 (0.93–1.04) | 1.04 (0.99–1.10) |
| ED visit rate | ||||
| IBD-specific | ||||
| IBD-related | ||||
| Risk of ED visit | ||||
| IBD-specific | ||||
| IBD-related |
Notes: Bolded results: statistically significant. Original model: no specialist care measure included as independent variable. Specialist care definition # 1: included whether patient had gastroenterologist as primary IBD care provider (>50% of IBD-specific visits) as independent variable. Specialist care definition # 2: included the proportion of IBD-specific care provided by a gastroenterologist as independent variable. Specialist care definition # 3: included whether patient had ever seen a gastroenterologist within the first 6 months of diagnosis as independent variable. Bolded results were statistically significant (P<0.05).
Abbreviations: ED, emergency department; HR, hazard ratio; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; IRR, incidence rate ratio; OR, odds ratio.