Nicolas Senn1, Christine Cohidon1, Mylaine Breton2, Jean-Fréderic Levesque3,4, Jean-Christophe Zuchuat1. 1. Department of Ambulatory Care and Community Medicine, Institute of Family Medicine, University of Lausanne, rue du Bugnon 44, 1011 Lausanne, Switzerland. 2. University of Sherbrooke, 150, place Charles-Le Moyne, C. P. 200 Longueuil (Québec) J4K 0A8, Montreal, Canada. 3. Agency for Clinical Innovation, 67 Albert Avenue, Chatswood, NSW 2067, Australia. 4. Centre for Primary Health Care and Equity, Level 3, AGSM Building, UNSW, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Access to primary care (PC) is vital, but complex to define and compare between settings. We aimed to generate a typology of patients' access patterns across countries using a novel inductive approach. DESIGN: Cross-sectional surveys. SETTING: Australia, Canada, New Zealand and Switzerland between 2012 and 2014 as part of the QUALICO-PC project. PARTICIPANTS: Data were collected from 1306 general practices and 10 000+ patients, with nine patients per practice. INTERVENTION(S): None. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Typology of access. RESULTS: Three axes were retained, explaining 23% of the total variance: (i) 'temporal and geographical access'; (ii) 'frequency of access and unmet healthcare needs'; and (iii) 'affordability and frequency of access'.Based on the three axes, we identified four clusters of patients: (i) patients reporting overall good access to PC; (ii) frequent users with unmet healthcare needs; (iii) under-users with financial barriers; and (iv) users with poor time/geographical access.Better access to PC was experienced in Switzerland and New Zealand, while worst access was reported in Canada, where most of the time and geographical barriers were reported. Most financial barriers were observed in Australia and New Zealand. Frequent users with some level of unmet healthcare needs are prevalent in all four countries. CONCLUSIONS: Four main groups of patients with different patterns of access were identified: (i) good access; (ii) geographical and time barriers; (iii) financial barriers; and (iv) frequent users with unmet healthcare needs. Differences in access between the four countries are substantial.
OBJECTIVE: Access to primary care (PC) is vital, but complex to define and compare between settings. We aimed to generate a typology of patients' access patterns across countries using a novel inductive approach. DESIGN: Cross-sectional surveys. SETTING: Australia, Canada, New Zealand and Switzerland between 2012 and 2014 as part of the QUALICO-PC project. PARTICIPANTS: Data were collected from 1306 general practices and 10 000+ patients, with nine patients per practice. INTERVENTION(S): None. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Typology of access. RESULTS: Three axes were retained, explaining 23% of the total variance: (i) 'temporal and geographical access'; (ii) 'frequency of access and unmet healthcare needs'; and (iii) 'affordability and frequency of access'.Based on the three axes, we identified four clusters of patients: (i) patients reporting overall good access to PC; (ii) frequent users with unmet healthcare needs; (iii) under-users with financial barriers; and (iv) users with poor time/geographical access.Better access to PC was experienced in Switzerland and New Zealand, while worst access was reported in Canada, where most of the time and geographical barriers were reported. Most financial barriers were observed in Australia and New Zealand. Frequent users with some level of unmet healthcare needs are prevalent in all four countries. CONCLUSIONS: Four main groups of patients with different patterns of access were identified: (i) good access; (ii) geographical and time barriers; (iii) financial barriers; and (iv) frequent users with unmet healthcare needs. Differences in access between the four countries are substantial.
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