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Trends in health services utilization, medication use, and health conditions among older adults: a 2-year retrospective chart review in a primary care practice

BACKGROUND: Population aging poses significant challenges to primary care providers and healthcare policy makers. Primary care reform can alleviate the pressures, but these initiatives require clinical benchmarks and evidence regarding utilization patterns. The objectives of this study is to measure...

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Autores principales: Vegda, Ketan, Nie, Jason X, Wang, Li, Tracy, C Shawn, Moineddin, Rahim, Upshur, Ross EG
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2791763/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19948033
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-9-217
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author Vegda, Ketan
Nie, Jason X
Wang, Li
Tracy, C Shawn
Moineddin, Rahim
Upshur, Ross EG
author_facet Vegda, Ketan
Nie, Jason X
Wang, Li
Tracy, C Shawn
Moineddin, Rahim
Upshur, Ross EG
author_sort Vegda, Ketan
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Population aging poses significant challenges to primary care providers and healthcare policy makers. Primary care reform can alleviate the pressures, but these initiatives require clinical benchmarks and evidence regarding utilization patterns. The objectives of this study is to measure older patients' use of health services, number of health conditions, and use of medications at the level of a primary care practice, and to investigate age- and gender-related utilization trends. METHODS: A cross-sectional chart audit over a 2-year study period was conducted in the academic family practice clinic of Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. All patients 65 years and older (n = 2450) were included. Main outcome measures included the number of family physician visits, specialist visits, emergency room visits, surgical admissions, diagnostic test days, inpatient hospital admissions, health conditions, and medications. RESULTS: Older patients (80-84 and 85+ age-group) had significantly more family physician visits (average of 4.4 visits per person per year), emergency room visits (average of 0.22 ER visits per year per patient), diagnostic days (average of 5.1 test days per person per year), health conditions (average of 7.7 per patient), and medications average of 8.2 medications per person). Gender differences were also observed: females had significantly more family physician visits and number of medications, while men had more specialist visits, emergency room visits, and surgical admissions. There were no gender differences for inpatient hospital admissions and number of health conditions. With the exception of the 85+ age group, we found greater intra-group variability with advancing age. CONCLUSION: The data present a map of greater interaction with and dependency on the health care system with advancing age. The magnitudes are substantial and indicate high demands on patients and families, on professional health care providers, and on the health care system itself. There is the need to create and evaluate innovative models of care of multiple chronic conditions in the late life course.
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spelling pubmed-27917632009-12-11 Trends in health services utilization, medication use, and health conditions among older adults: a 2-year retrospective chart review in a primary care practice Vegda, Ketan Nie, Jason X Wang, Li Tracy, C Shawn Moineddin, Rahim Upshur, Ross EG BMC Health Serv Res Research article BACKGROUND: Population aging poses significant challenges to primary care providers and healthcare policy makers. Primary care reform can alleviate the pressures, but these initiatives require clinical benchmarks and evidence regarding utilization patterns. The objectives of this study is to measure older patients' use of health services, number of health conditions, and use of medications at the level of a primary care practice, and to investigate age- and gender-related utilization trends. METHODS: A cross-sectional chart audit over a 2-year study period was conducted in the academic family practice clinic of Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. All patients 65 years and older (n = 2450) were included. Main outcome measures included the number of family physician visits, specialist visits, emergency room visits, surgical admissions, diagnostic test days, inpatient hospital admissions, health conditions, and medications. RESULTS: Older patients (80-84 and 85+ age-group) had significantly more family physician visits (average of 4.4 visits per person per year), emergency room visits (average of 0.22 ER visits per year per patient), diagnostic days (average of 5.1 test days per person per year), health conditions (average of 7.7 per patient), and medications average of 8.2 medications per person). Gender differences were also observed: females had significantly more family physician visits and number of medications, while men had more specialist visits, emergency room visits, and surgical admissions. There were no gender differences for inpatient hospital admissions and number of health conditions. With the exception of the 85+ age group, we found greater intra-group variability with advancing age. CONCLUSION: The data present a map of greater interaction with and dependency on the health care system with advancing age. The magnitudes are substantial and indicate high demands on patients and families, on professional health care providers, and on the health care system itself. There is the need to create and evaluate innovative models of care of multiple chronic conditions in the late life course. BioMed Central 2009-11-30 /pmc/articles/PMC2791763/ /pubmed/19948033 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-9-217 Text en Copyright ©2009 Vegda et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research article
Vegda, Ketan
Nie, Jason X
Wang, Li
Tracy, C Shawn
Moineddin, Rahim
Upshur, Ross EG
Trends in health services utilization, medication use, and health conditions among older adults: a 2-year retrospective chart review in a primary care practice
title Trends in health services utilization, medication use, and health conditions among older adults: a 2-year retrospective chart review in a primary care practice
title_full Trends in health services utilization, medication use, and health conditions among older adults: a 2-year retrospective chart review in a primary care practice
title_fullStr Trends in health services utilization, medication use, and health conditions among older adults: a 2-year retrospective chart review in a primary care practice
title_full_unstemmed Trends in health services utilization, medication use, and health conditions among older adults: a 2-year retrospective chart review in a primary care practice
title_short Trends in health services utilization, medication use, and health conditions among older adults: a 2-year retrospective chart review in a primary care practice
title_sort trends in health services utilization, medication use, and health conditions among older adults: a 2-year retrospective chart review in a primary care practice
topic Research article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2791763/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19948033
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-9-217
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