Abstract

BackgroundAlthough we are observing a general move towards larger primary care practices, surprisingly little is known about the influence of key components of practice organization on primary care. We aimed to determine the relationships between practice size, and revenue sharing agreements, and quality of care.MethodsAs part of a large cross sectional study, group practices were randomly selected from different primary care service delivery models in Ontario. Patient surveys and chart reviews were used to assess quality of care. Multilevel regressions controlled for patient, provider and practice characteristics.ResultsPositive statistically significant associations were found between the logarithm of group size and access, comprehensiveness, and disease prevention. Negative significant associations were found between logarithm group size and continuity. No differences were found for chronic disease management and health promotion. Practices that shared revenues were found to deliver superior health promotion compared to those who did not. Interacting group size with the presence of a revenue-sharing arrangement had a negative impact on health promotion.ConclusionsDespite the limitations of our study, our findings have provided preliminary evidence of the tradeoffs inherent with increasing practice size. Larger group size is associated with better access and comprehensiveness but worse continuity of care. Revenue sharing in group practices was associated with higher health promotion compared to sharing only common costs. Further work is required to better inform policy makers and practitioners as to whether the pattern revealed in larger practices mitigates any of the previously reported benefits of continuity of primary care. We found few benefits of revenue sharing – even then the effect of revenue sharing on health promotion seemed diminished in larger practices.

Highlights

  • We are observing a general move towards larger primary care practices, surprisingly little is known about the influence of key components of practice organization on primary care

  • We used the COMP-PC dataset to answer two research questions: 1) what is the relationship between practice size and the quality of primary care? and 2) what is the relationship between revenue sharing agreements and the quality of care delivered by group practices? We address the combined effect of group size and revenue sharing on quality of care

  • 73% of Community Health Centre (CHC) patients were female while only 51% of Health Service Organisation (HSO) patients were; electronic medical records were present in 2 of 21 FFS practices whereas 7 of 32 CHCs used this technology; and more female physicians are found in CHCs as compared to all other models

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Summary

Introduction

We are observing a general move towards larger primary care practices, surprisingly little is known about the influence of key components of practice organization on primary care. After a long history of solo family practice, many Canadian family physicians (FPs) are moving towards working in groups. Half of all Canadian FPs (51%) practice with other family physicians in group settings, a proportion which rises to 60% for those FPs under 35 years of age [1,2]. The Ontario government supports group practice models and alternative payment plans in order to address undersupply of physicians and mal-distribution of services across the province [4]. This move has been supported by physician organizations to prevent burnout of solo physicians [5].

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