Volume 40 | Number 2 | April 2005

Abstract List

Verena H. Menec, Monica Sirski, Dhiwya Attawar


Objective

To examine the relation between continuity of care and preventive health care and emergency department (ED) use in a universal health care system.


Data Sources/Study Setting

Administrative data that capture health care use of the entire population of a midwestern Canadian city.


Study Design

A population‐based, retrospective study of all individuals who had a least one physician contact in 1998 or 1999 (total =536,893).


Methods

Logistic regressions were conducted to examine the relation between continuity of care, defined in terms of the proportion of total visits to family physicians (FPs) made to the same FP, and cervical cancer screening, breast cancer screening, influenza vaccination, pneumococcal vaccination, and ED visits, controlling for demographic variables, socioeconomic status (defined in terms of relative affluence of neighborhood of residence), and health status.


Principal Findings

Continuity of care was related to better preventive health care and reduced ED use. A consistent socioeconomic gradient also emerged. For instance, the odds of having a mammogram was double for individuals living in the wealthiest neighborhoods, relative to those in the poorest neighborhoods (adjusted odds ratio=2.31, 99 percent CI 2.13–2.50).


Conclusions

Having a long‐term relationship with a single physician makes a difference even in a universal health care system. Moreover, socioeconomic disparities remain, suggesting the need to target specifically individuals from lower socioeconomic strata for preventive health care.