Abstract

BackgroundAs health systems evolve, it is essential to evaluate their impact on the delivery of health services to socially disadvantaged populations. We evaluated the delivery of primary health services for different socio-economic groups and assessed the performance of different organizational models in terms of equality of health care delivery in Ontario, Canada.MethodsCross sectional study of 5,361 patients receiving care from primary care practices using Capitation, Salaried or Fee-For-Service remuneration models. We assessed self-reported health status of patients, visit duration, number of visits per year, quality of health service delivery, and quality of health promotion. We used multi-level regressions to study service delivery across socio-economic groups and within each delivery model. Identified disparities were further analysed using a t-test to determine the impact of service delivery model on equity.ResultsLow income individuals were more likely to be women, unemployed, recent immigrants, and in poorer health. These individuals were overrepresented in the Salaried model, reported more visits/year across all models, and tended to report longer visits in the Salaried model. Measures of primary care services generally did not differ significantly between low and higher income/education individuals; when they did, the difference favoured better service delivery for at-risk groups. At-risk patients in the Salaried model were somewhat more likely to report health promotion activities than patients from Capitation and Fee-For-Service models. At-risk patients from Capitation models reported a smaller increase in the number of additional clinic visits/year than Fee-For-Service and Salaried models. At-risk patients reported better first contact accessibility than their non-at-risk counterparts in the Fee-For-Service model only.ConclusionsPrimary care service measures did not differ significantly across socio-economic status or primary care delivery models. In Ontario, capitation-based remuneration is age and sex adjusted only. Patients of low socio-economic status had fewer additional visits compared to those with high socio-economic status under the Capitation model. This raises the concern that Capitation may not support the provision of additional care for more vulnerable groups. Regions undertaking primary care model reforms need to consider the potential impact of the changes on the more vulnerable populations.

Highlights

  • As health systems evolve, it is essential to evaluate their impact on the delivery of health services to socially disadvantaged populations

  • We report the scores for the overall Primary Care Assessment Tool health service delivery questions and the individual scale scores separately

  • This study found that some measures of primary care services were significantly higher for people who are disadvantaged by low income and/or education

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Summary

Introduction

It is essential to evaluate their impact on the delivery of health services to socially disadvantaged populations. Individuals with low income or low education are less likely to have undergone cancer screening than wealthier and better educated individuals [5] This is disconcerting, as socio-economically disadvantaged individuals have poorer self-rated health, [6] higher rates of obesity and alcohol consumption, [7,8] ischaemic heart disease, [9,10]. Type Two diabetes, and other chronic conditions, [11,12] and greater chances of premature mortality [13,14] To address this disparity, Canadian [15] and international [16] policy recommendations emphasize the need for further investment in primary health care systems to improve effectiveness and fairness of access to health care. Because disadvantaged patients depend more on primary rather than specialty care to meet their health needs, [19] it is important to understand how primary care models perform for these patients

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