Nov 18 2004
Nearly nine out of ten seniors switch their primary care physicians because they are forced to – not by choice. That's the finding of research published in the November edition of The Journal of the American Board of Family Practice.
Analyzing survey data from nearly 800 patients 65 and older, researchers found that 14 percent of seniors changed physicians in a single year. Of those, almost nine out of 10 changed their physicians involuntarily. Insurance-related reasons accounted for 44 percent of the switches. Forty percent of the patients sought new physicians because their former doctors had moved, retired, or died.
"This study should raise concerns about changes in the health care system in recent years, including insurance and physician workforce instability," said James W. Mold, M.D., M.P.H., lead author. "Maintaining a long-term relationship with a primary care physician – what we call 'continuity of care' – is associated with better health outcomes for patients at a lower cost. It also increases the likelihood patients will take their medications as directed and keep their medical appointments."
Mold is director of the Research Division in the Department of Family and Preventive Medicine at the College of Medicine, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, and adjunct professor for the Department of Geriatric Medicine. Joining in the research was Ed Fryer, Ph.D., then with The Robert Graham Center: Policy Studies in Family Medicine and Primary Care in Washington, D.C.
"Current proposals for reform and expansion of the Medicare program, particularly those that promote privatization, could potentially increase the rate of involuntary discontinuity because of insurance coverage changes and further instability in the physician workforce," the researchers concluded. "This would probably have a significant negative impact on the quality of primary health care services available to the elderly."
http://www.annfammed.org/