Abstract
Abstract/summary
Background
As in other countries, there is concern and some fragmentary evidence that GPs’ central role in the Swiss healthcare system as the primary provider of care might be changing or even be in decline. Our study gives a systematic account of GPs’ involvement in accident care from 2008 to 2016 and identifies changes in GPs’ involvement in this typical field of primary care: how frequently GPs were involved along the care pathway, to what extent they figured as initial care provider, and what their role in the care pathway was.
Methods
Using a claims dataset from the largest Swiss accident insurer with two million accident cases, we constructed individual care pathways, i.e., when and from which providers patients received care. We calculated probabilities for the involvement of various care provider groups, for initial care provision, and for the role of GPs in patients’ care pathways, adjusted for injury and patient characteristics using multinomial regression.
Results
In 2014, GPs were involved in 70% of all accident cases requiring outpatient care but no inpatient stay, and provided initial care in 56%. While involvement stayed at about the same level for accidents occurring from 2008 to 2014, the share of accidents where GPs provided initial care decreased by 4 percentage points. The share of cases where GPs acted as sole care provider decreased by 7 percentage points down to 44%. At the same time, accident cases involving care from an ED at any point in time increased from 38 to 46% and the share receiving initial care from an ED from 30 to 35 percentage points – apparently substituting for the declining involvement of GPs in initial care. GPs’ involvement in accident care is higher in rural compared to urban regions, among elderly compared to younger patients, and among Swiss compared to non-Swiss citizens.
Conclusions
GPs play a key role in accident care with considerable variation depending on region and patient profile. From 2008 to 2014, there is a remarkable decline in GPs’ provision of initial care after an accident. This is a strong indication that the GPs’ role in the Swiss healthcare system is changing.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference30 articles.
1. Djalali S, Meier T, Hasler S, et al. Primary care in Switzerland gains strength. Fam Pract. 2015;32(3):348–53. https://doi.org/10.1093/fampra/cmv005.
2. Künzi K. "Grundversorgungsmedizin" in der Schweiz: Stand der Diskussionen zur Frage der" Grundversorger/innen/Hausärzt/innen" und ihrer zahlenmässigen Entwicklung. Bern: Standortbestimmungen Gesundheitsberufe 15; 2005.
3. De Pietro C, Camenzind P, Sturny I, et al. Switzerland: health system review. Health Syst Transit. 2015;17(4):1–288.
4. Tschudi P, Rosemann T. Die Zukunft der Hausarztmedizin! Wie finden wir den Nachwuchs? Womit können wir junge Ärztinnen und Ärzte für das Weiterbildungsziel "Hausärztin" motivieren? PrimaryCare. 2010;10(4):62–6.
5. SSUV. Sammelstelle für die Statistik der Unfallversicherung UVG. Unfallstatistik UVG 2017. SUVA: Luzern; 2018.
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献