Abstract

BackgroundHealth care reform promises to dramatically increase the number of Americans covered by health insurance. Osteopathic physicians (DOs) are recognized for primary care, including a "hands-on" style with an emphasis on patient-centered care. Thus, DOs may be well positioned to deliver primary care in this emerging health care environment.MethodsWe used data from the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (2002-2006) to study sociodemographic and geographic characteristics associated with patient visits to DOs for primary care. Descriptive analyses were initially performed to derive national population estimates (NPEs) for overall patient visits, primary care patient visits, and patient visits according to specialty status. Osteopathic and allopathic physician (MD) patient visits were compared using cross-tabulations and multiple logistic regression to compute odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for DO patient visits. The latter analyses were also conducted separately for each geographic characteristic to assess the potential for effect modification based on these factors.ResultsOverall, 134,369 ambulatory medical care visits were surveyed, representing 4.6 billion (NPE) ± 220 million (SE) patient visits when patient visit weights were applied. Osteopathic physicians provided 336 million ± 30 million (7%) of these patient visits. Osteopathic physicians provided 217 million ± 21 million (10%) patient visits for primary care services; including 180 million ± 17 million (12%) primary care visits for adults (21 years of age or older) and 37 million ± 5 million (5%) primary care visits for minors. Osteopathic physicians were more likely than MDs to provide primary care visits in family and general medicine (OR, 6.03; 95% CI, 4.67-7.78), but were less likely to provide visits in internal medicine (OR, 0.37; 95% CI, 0.24-0.58) or pediatrics (OR, 0.21; 95% CI, 0.11-0.40). Overall, patients in the pediatric and geriatric ages, Blacks, Hispanics, and persons in the South and West were less likely to utilize DOs, although there was some evidence of effect modification according to United States Census region.ConclusionsHealth care reform provides unprecedented opportunities for DOs to reach historically underserved populations and to overcome the "pediatric primary-care paradox."

Highlights

  • As health care reform promises to dramatically increase the number of Americans covered by health insurance, greater access to health care will increase the demand for primary care physicians and may further exacerbate the projected shortage

  • Osteopathic physicians were more likely than MDs to provide primary care visits (OR, 2.07; 95% confidence intervals (CIs), 1.61-2.67)

  • There were important differences in the shares of primary care visits provided by DOs according to specialty, ranging from only 2% for pediatrics, to 3% for internal medicine, and 20% for family or general medicine

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Summary

Introduction

Health care reform promises to dramatically increase the number of Americans covered by health insurance. Osteopathic physicians (DOs) are recognized for primary care, including a “hands-on” style with an emphasis on patient-centered care. As health care reform promises to dramatically increase the number of Americans covered by health insurance, greater access to health care will increase the demand for primary care physicians and may further exacerbate the projected shortage. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 supports several elements aimed at ameliorating this primary care workforce shortage, including increased funding for National Health Services Corps and Title VII health professions programs, grants and graduate medical education funds for primary care residency programs, redistribution of at least 65% of unfilled slots in non-primary care residency programs to primary care or general surgery residency programs, and accelerated pilot testing and implementation of new models such as the patient-centered medical home [6]. The lag time for implementation of these strategies and realization of their intended consequences suggests that newly insured patients, in underserved communities, can anticipate difficulties gaining access to primary care [6]

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