Abstract

Hypertension has been the leading risk factor contributing to cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, which needs comprehensive measures to manage and can be controlled effectively in primary care. In the health care context of South Korea, where specialists can see patients directly at their own community clinics and there has been no consensus on the definition of primary care, the authors used the nationally representative 2013 Korea Health Panel data, categorized adults (≥18 years) with hypertension by types of usual source of care (USC), and analyzed the association of having a comprehensive community clinic (i.e., primary care) physician as a USC with experience of emergency department (ED) visits and hospitalization within a year. After adjusting for cofounding variables including Charlson comorbidity index scores, those having a primary care physician as a USC remained associated with a decrease in an experience of ED visits (OR: 0.61, 95% CI: 0.40–0.93) and hospitalization (OR: 0.69, 95% CI: 0.49–0.96), compared to those not having a usual physician. Health policies that promote having a primary care physician as a USC could decrease unnecessary experience of ED visits and hospitalization by adults with hypertension. This can partly reduce ED overcrowding and avoidable hospitalization in Korea.

Highlights

  • Chronic diseases are the leading causes of death and disability worldwide

  • Types of health insurance were significantly associated with types of physicians as a usual source of care (USC)

  • After adjusting for Self-rated health (SRH) and Charlson comorbidity index (CCI) score as well as sociodemographic factors, those having a comprehensive clinic physicians (CCPs) as a USC (OR: 0.61, 95% CI: 0.40–0.93, p = 0.023) remained associated with a decrease in emergency department (ED) visits compared to those not having a usual physician, but those having a non-comprehensive CCP or a hospital specialist physician as a USC did not (Table 3)

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Summary

Introduction

Chronic diseases are the leading causes of death and disability worldwide. Hypertension occurs in 69% of those with a first myocardial infarction, in 77% of those with a first stroke, 74% of those with chronic heart failure, and in 60% of those with peripheral arterial diseases [2]. It is one of the most prevalent chronic diseases in Korea—among those aged 30 and older, 32.7% in men and 23.1% in women have hypertension [3]. There is still much room for improvement in managing patients with hypertension

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