Abstract

Using data collected from 25,780 Hong Kong citizens in a household survey, this study aimed to investigate the association between having regular source of primary care and hospitalization amongst people with and without multimorbidity (two or more chronic conditions). Potential interaction effects of regular primary care with multimorbidity were also examined. Results revealed a significant association between having regular source of primary care from General Practitioners and reduced hospitalization amongst respondents with multimorbidity (RR = 0.772; 95% CI = 0.667–0.894), adjusting for other potential confounding factors (i.e., socio-demographic factors and medical insurance and benefits). In contrast, having regular Specialist care was significantly associated with increased risk of hospitalization among both people with multimorbidity (RR = 1.619; 95% CI = 1.256–2.087) and without multimorbidity (RR = 1.981; 95% CI = 1.246–3.149), adjusting for potential confounders. A dose-response relationship between the number of chronic diseases and hospitalization was also observed, regardless of whether participants had regular source of primary care or not; relative risks and predicted probabilities for hospitalization were generally greater for those without regular source of primary care. Further studies are warranted to explore the role of healthcare system, informatics, organizational and practice-related factors on healthcare and functional outcomes.

Highlights

  • Using data collected from 25,780 Hong Kong citizens in a household survey, this study aimed to investigate the association between having regular source of primary care and hospitalization amongst people with and without multimorbidity

  • There is a global epidemic of long-term chronic conditions[2], and the related long-term care expenditure has been increasing around the world[3]

  • In this large population representative study, we have shown that having a regular source of primary care from GP is associated with reduced hospital admissions among people with

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Summary

Introduction

Using data collected from 25,780 Hong Kong citizens in a household survey, this study aimed to investigate the association between having regular source of primary care and hospitalization amongst people with and without multimorbidity (two or more chronic conditions). Regular source of primary care is found to be associated with reduced hospitalizations[6,10], which require great amount of professional and technological resources, and incur high medical costs With this epidemic of long-term chronic conditions, there is an increasing number of people living with two or more chronic conditions, known as multimorbidity. In this study, we utilized a large population-representative household dataset in Hong Kong to investigate the association of regular source of primary care with number of hospital admissions among people with and without multimorbidity. As a sub-analysis, we tested the interaction effect between the source of primary care received and multimorbidity in influencing hospitalizations

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