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Using administrative data to measure the extent to which practitioners work together: “interconnected” care is common in a large cohort of family physicians
BACKGROUND: Health care practitioners in jurisdictions around the world are encouraged to work in groups. The extent to which they actually do so, however, is not often measured. The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate the potential for administrative data to measure how practitioners are interc...
Autores principales: | , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Open Medicine Publications, Inc.
2011
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3345380/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22567073 |
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author | Manuel, Douglas G Lam, Kelvin Maaten, Sarah Klein-Geltink, Julie |
author_facet | Manuel, Douglas G Lam, Kelvin Maaten, Sarah Klein-Geltink, Julie |
author_sort | Manuel, Douglas G |
collection | PubMed |
description | BACKGROUND: Health care practitioners in jurisdictions around the world are encouraged to work in groups. The extent to which they actually do so, however, is not often measured. The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate the potential for administrative data to measure how practitioners are interconnected through their care of patients. Our example examined the interconnected care provided by family physicians. METHODS: We defined a physician as being “interconnected” with another physician if these 2 physicians provided at least 1% of their clinic visits over a 2-year period to the same patients. We examined a cohort of 2945 primary care physicians in 309 Family Health Networks and Family Health Groups in Ontario, Canada, in 2005/06. In total, 9.3 million physician visits for 2.1 million patients were studied. For each group practice we calculated the number of interconnected physicians. RESULTS: Physicians had, on average, 2.2 interconnected physician partners (median = 1; 25th and 75th percentile: 0, 3). Physicians saw mainly their own listed patients, and 7.9% (median = 5.9%; 25th and 75th percentile: 2.4%, 11.6%) of their visits were provided to patients of their interconnected partners. The number of interconnected physicians was higher in group practices that had more physicians, but levelled to 2.5 interconnected physicians in practices with 8 or 9 physicians. INTERPRETATION: Routinely collected administrative data can be used to examine how health care is organized and delivered in groups or networks of practitioners. This study’s concept of interconnected care provided by primary care physicians within groups could be expanded to include other practitioners and, indeed, entire health care systems using more complex network analysis methods. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-3345380 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2011 |
publisher | Open Medicine Publications, Inc. |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-33453802012-05-07 Using administrative data to measure the extent to which practitioners work together: “interconnected” care is common in a large cohort of family physicians Manuel, Douglas G Lam, Kelvin Maaten, Sarah Klein-Geltink, Julie Open Med Research BACKGROUND: Health care practitioners in jurisdictions around the world are encouraged to work in groups. The extent to which they actually do so, however, is not often measured. The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate the potential for administrative data to measure how practitioners are interconnected through their care of patients. Our example examined the interconnected care provided by family physicians. METHODS: We defined a physician as being “interconnected” with another physician if these 2 physicians provided at least 1% of their clinic visits over a 2-year period to the same patients. We examined a cohort of 2945 primary care physicians in 309 Family Health Networks and Family Health Groups in Ontario, Canada, in 2005/06. In total, 9.3 million physician visits for 2.1 million patients were studied. For each group practice we calculated the number of interconnected physicians. RESULTS: Physicians had, on average, 2.2 interconnected physician partners (median = 1; 25th and 75th percentile: 0, 3). Physicians saw mainly their own listed patients, and 7.9% (median = 5.9%; 25th and 75th percentile: 2.4%, 11.6%) of their visits were provided to patients of their interconnected partners. The number of interconnected physicians was higher in group practices that had more physicians, but levelled to 2.5 interconnected physicians in practices with 8 or 9 physicians. INTERPRETATION: Routinely collected administrative data can be used to examine how health care is organized and delivered in groups or networks of practitioners. This study’s concept of interconnected care provided by primary care physicians within groups could be expanded to include other practitioners and, indeed, entire health care systems using more complex network analysis methods. Open Medicine Publications, Inc. 2011-10-25 /pmc/articles/PMC3345380/ /pubmed/22567073 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/ca/ Open Medicine applies the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike License, which means that anyone is able to freely copy, download, reprint, reuse, distribute, display or perform this work and that authors retain copyright of their work. Any derivative use of this work must be distributed only under a license identical to this one and must be attributed to the authors. Any of these conditions can be waived with permission from the copyright holder. These conditions do not negate or supersede Fair Use laws in any country. |
spellingShingle | Research Manuel, Douglas G Lam, Kelvin Maaten, Sarah Klein-Geltink, Julie Using administrative data to measure the extent to which practitioners work together: “interconnected” care is common in a large cohort of family physicians |
title | Using administrative data to measure the extent to which practitioners work together: “interconnected” care is common in a large cohort of family physicians |
title_full | Using administrative data to measure the extent to which practitioners work together: “interconnected” care is common in a large cohort of family physicians |
title_fullStr | Using administrative data to measure the extent to which practitioners work together: “interconnected” care is common in a large cohort of family physicians |
title_full_unstemmed | Using administrative data to measure the extent to which practitioners work together: “interconnected” care is common in a large cohort of family physicians |
title_short | Using administrative data to measure the extent to which practitioners work together: “interconnected” care is common in a large cohort of family physicians |
title_sort | using administrative data to measure the extent to which practitioners work together: “interconnected” care is common in a large cohort of family physicians |
topic | Research |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3345380/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22567073 |
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