| Literature DB >> 30819168 |
Wenjuan Tao1, Wenqi Zeng1, Ling Yan1, Huazhen Yang2, Jin Wen3, Weimin Li4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many countries, including China, have identified the primary health care system as a reform priority. The purpose of this study is to compare the perceived service capacity of primary care from the perspectives of physicians and their patients in Sichuan province of China.Entities:
Keywords: Health service capacity; Primary care; QUALICOPC
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30819168 PMCID: PMC6396462 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-019-3964-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1The process of questionnaires adaptation and fieldwork strategy
Socio-demographic characteristics of study participants by GRP area
| Characteristic | Total n (%) | High-GRP areas n (%) | Middle-GRP areas n (%) | Low-GRP areas n (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physicians | ||||
| Total | 319 (100) | 107 (33.5) | 115 (36.1) | 97 (30.4) |
| Gender | ||||
| Male | 159 (49.8) | 49 (45.8) | 57 (49.6) | 53 (54.6) |
| Female | 160 (50.2) | 58 (54.2) | 58 (50.4) | 44 (45.4) |
| Age (years) | ||||
| < 30 | 75 (23.5) | 26 (24.3) | 32 (27.8) | 17 (17.5) |
| 30– | 96 (30.1) | 36 (33.6) | 32 (27.8) | 28 (28.9) |
| 40– | 89 (27.9) | 27 (25.2) | 34 (29.6) | 28 (28.9) |
| ≥ 50 | 59 (18.5) | 18 (16.8) | 17 (14.8) | 24 (24.7) |
| Education | ||||
| High school or below | 3 (0.9) | 1 (0.9) | 1 (0.9) | 1 (1.0) |
| Junior college | 185 (58.0) | 55 (51.4) | 74 (64.3) | 56 (57.7) |
| College | 131 (41.1) | 51 (47.7) | 40 (34.8) | 40 (41.2) |
| Practice area | ||||
| Urban | 136 (42.6) | 51 (47.7) | 51 (44.3) | 34 (35.1) |
| Rural | 183 (57.4) | 56 (52.3) | 64 (55.7) | 63 (64.9) |
| Experience in PC (years) | ||||
| < 5 | 55 (17.2) | 17 (15.9) | 24 (20.9) | 14 (14.4) |
| 5– | 89 (27.9) | 35 (32.7) | 34 (29.6) | 20 (20.6) |
| 15– | 91 (28.5) | 31 (29.0) | 34 (29.6) | 26 (26.8) |
| 25– | 84 (26.3) | 24 (22.4) | 23 (20.0) | 37 (38.1) |
| Specialization | ||||
| General practice | 157 (49.2) | 55 (51.4) | 52 (45.2) | 50 (51.5) |
| Traditional Chinese medicine | 112 (35.1) | 35 (32.7) | 46 (40.0) | 31 (32.0) |
| Specialist and other | 50 (15.7) | 17 (15.9) | 17 (14.8) | 16 (16.5) |
| Patients | ||||
| Total | 641 (100) | 233 (36.3) | 192 (30.0) | 216 (33.7) |
| Gender | ||||
| Male | 301 (47.0) | 105 (45.1) | 98 (51.0) | 98 (45.4) |
| Female | 340 (53.0) | 128 (54.9) | 94 (49.0) | 118 (54.6) |
| Age (years) | ||||
| 18– | 56 (8.7) | 18 (7.7) | 18 (9.4) | 20 (9.3) |
| 40– | 211 (32.9) | 82 (35.2) | 49 (25.5) | 80 (37.0) |
| 50– | 165 (25.7) | 65 (27.9) | 50 (26.0) | 50 (23.1) |
| ≥ 60 | 209 (32.6) | 68 (29.2) | 75 (39.1) | 66 (30.6) |
| Education | ||||
| Primary school or illiteracy | 190 (29.6) | 59 (25.3) | 61 (31.8) | 70 (32.4) |
| Middle school | 190 (29.6) | 53 (22.7) | 71 (37.0) | 66 (30.6) |
| High school | 189 (29.5) | 63 (27.0) | 52 (27.1) | 74 (34.3) |
| College or higher education | 72 (11.2) | 58 (24.9) | 8 (4.2) | 6 (2.8) |
| Employment status | ||||
| Employed | 288 (44.9) | 115 (49.4) | 90 (46.9) | 83 (38.4) |
| Self-employed or family business | 223 (34.8) | 60 (25.8) | 67 (34.9) | 96 (44.4) |
| Retired/unemployed | 130 (20.3) | 58 (24.9) | 35 (18.2) | 37 (17.1) |
| Self-evaluated health status | ||||
| Very good | 35 (5.5) | 9 (3.9) | 13 (6.8) | 13 (6.0) |
| Good | 136 (21.2) | 51 (21.9) | 44 (22.9) | 41 (19.0) |
| Fair | 346 (54.0) | 127 (54.5) | 99 (51.6) | 120 (55.6) |
| Poor | 124 (19.3) | 46 (19.7) | 36 (18.8) | 42 (19.4) |
| Declared household income | ||||
| Below average | 326 (50.9) | 119 (51.1) | 100 (52.1) | 107 (49.5) |
| Average | 315 (49.1) | 114 (48.9) | 92 (47.9) | 109 (50.5) |
| Above average | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| Chronic disease | ||||
| Yes | 428 (66.8) | 164 (70.4) | 131 (68.2) | 133 (61.6) |
| No | 213 (33.2) | 69 (29.6) | 61 (31.8) | 83 (38.4) |
Note: GRP Gross Regional Product, PC Primary Care
Capacity indexes of the core dimensions in primary care in China
| Item | Physician | Patient | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| SD |
| SD | |
| Accessibility | 0.55 | 0.20 | 0.20 | 0.12 |
| Continuity | 0.40 | 0.16 | 0.31 | 0.33 |
| Coordination | 0.01 | 0.14 | 0.17 | 0.27 |
| Comprehensiveness | 0.34 | 0.09 | 0.53 | 0.26 |
| Quality | 0.47 | 0.37 | 0.73 | 0.20 |
| Equity | 0.63 | 0.20 | 0.52 | 0.26 |
Note: x- mean values, SD- standard deviation
Calculation method: all variables were evaluated by a scale ranging from −1 (extremely negative) to + 1 (extremely positive). The capacity indicator for each dimension was calculated as an arithmetic mean (μ) of variables
Fig. 2Perception of the core dimensions in primary care from physicians and patients. Q1-the first quartile, Q3-the third quartile, MIN-the minimum, MAX-the maximum; ACCS-Accessibility, COMP-Comprehensiveness, CONT-Continuity, COOR-Coordination, EQ- Equity, QUAL- Quality; Pat- = Patient; Phy- = Physician
Fig. 3Differences in the perspectives of physicians and patients