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Primary Care, Health, and Equity

Primary Care, Health, and Equity. Barbara Starfield, MD, MPH Supercourse lecture September 2004. Health systems have several major components:. Public health activities Primary care Specialty care.

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Primary Care, Health, and Equity

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  1. Primary Care, Health, and Equity Barbara Starfield, MD, MPH Supercourse lecture September 2004

  2. Health systems have several major components: • Public health activities • Primary care • Specialty care

  3. Primary care is the provision of first contact, person-focused ongoing care over time that meets the health-related needs of people, referring only those too uncommon to maintain competence, and coordinates care when people receive services at other levels of care.

  4. Primary health care is primary care applied on a population level. As a population strategy, it requires the commitment of governments to develop a population-oriented set of primary care services in the context of other levels and types of services.

  5. Why Is Primary Care Important? Better health outcomes Lower costs Greater equity in health

  6. Evidence of the Benefits of a Primary Care-Oriented Health System

  7. Primary Care Scores, 1980s and 1990s *Scores available only for the 1990s

  8. GER FR BEL US SWE JAP CAN FIN AUS SP DK NTH UK System and Practice CharacteristicsFacilitating Primary Care, Early-Mid 1990s *Best level of health indicator is ranked 1; worst is ranked 13; thus, lower average ranks indicate better performance.

  9. Primary Care Score vs. Health Care Expenditures, 1997 UK DK NTH FIN SP CAN AUS SWE JAP GER US BEL FR Based on data in Starfield & Shi, Health Policy 2002; 60:201-18.

  10. Average Rankings* for Health Indicators in Infancy, for Countries Grouped by Primary Care Orientation *Best level of health indicator is ranked 1; worst is ranked 13; thus, lower average ranks indicate better performance. **England and Wales only

  11. Average Rankings* for YPLL in Countries Grouped by Primary Care Orientation Suicide All Except External Female Male Female Male Worse primary care (Belgium, France, Germany, US) 7.3 8.8 10.8 8.3 Better primary care (Australia, Canada, Japan, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Netherlands, Spain, UK**) 6.9 6.3 6.2 5.4 *Best level of health indicator is ranked 1; worst is ranked 13; thus, lower average ranks indicate better performance. **England and Wales only

  12. Average Rankings* for Life Expectancy at Ages 40, 65, and 80, for Countries Grouped by Primary Care Orientation *Best level of health indicator is ranked 1; worst is ranked 13; thus, lower average ranks indicate better performance. **England and Wales only

  13. Average Rankings for World Health Organization Health Indicators for Countries Grouped by Primary Care Orientation DALE: Disability adjusted life expectancy (life lived in good health) Child survival: survival to age 2, with a disparities component Overall health: DALE minus DALE in absence of a health system Maximum DALE for health expenditures minus same in absence of a health system

  14. Primary Care Score and Health Outcomes *Primary care coefficient significant at p<0.05 level and estimated by fixed effects, using pooled cross-sectional time series design. Analysis controlled for GDP, percent elderly, doctors/capita, average income (ppp), alcohol and tobacco use. R2(within) averaged from to .36 to .84.

  15. Primary Care Score and Premature Mortality in 18 OECD Countries 10000 PYLL Low PC Countries* 5000 All Countries* High PC Countries* 0 1970 1980 1990 2000 Year *Predicted PYLL (both genders) estimated by fixed effects, using pooled cross-sectional time series design. Analysis controlled for GDP, percent elderly, doctors/capita, average income (ppp), alcohol and tobacco use. R2(within)=0.77.

  16. Overall, countries that achieve better health levels • Are primary care-oriented • Have more equitable resource distributions • Have government-provided health services or health insurance • Have little or no private health insurance • Have no or low co-payments for health services

  17. Is Primary Care as Important within Countries as It Is among Countries?

  18. . . . HI . . MN . . CT WA . ND MA . . . . . NE SD ID . OR CA . . ME . NH . . . AZ RI . . ID . . NM . MT . IA UT . NJ . . . TN . FL . WI KS NY . . TX AR . PA . MI DE KY . WV . . NC VA AL MD . IL MS . . NV R=.54 P<.05 . AK GA SC LA State Level Analysis:Primary Care and Life Expectancy

  19. Primary Care and Infant Mortality Rates, Indonesia, 1996-2000 *constant Indonesian rupiah, in billions

  20. In England, each additional primary care physician per 1000 (about a 20% increase) is associated with a decrease in mortality of about 5%, adjusting for limiting long-term illness and for various demographic and socioeconomic characteristics.

  21. Regression Analysis: Characteristics of Medicare Beneficiaries in Fair or Poor Health with a Preventable Hospitalization* *Only significant (p<.05) shown. Nonsignificant: age, nonwhite, education, marital status, income, supplemental insurance.

  22. Health Care Expenditures and Mortality 5 Year Followup:United States, 1987-92 • Adults (age 25 and older) with a primary care physician rather than a specialist as their personal physician • had 33% lower cost of care • were 19% less likely to die (after controlling for age, gender, income, insurance, smoking, perceived health (SF-36) and 11 major health conditions)

  23. Many other studies done WITHIN countries, both industrial and developing, show that areas with better primary care have better health outcomes, including total mortality rates, heart disease, mortality rates, and infant mortality, and earlier detection of cancers such as colorectal cancer, breast cancer, uterine/cervical cancer, and melanoma. The opposite is the case for higher specialist supply, which is associated with worse outcomes.

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