Health care utilization in persons with spinal cord injury: Part 2 - Determinants, geographic variation and comparison with the general population

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Abstract

Study design:Cross-sectional survey.Objectives:To investigate annual rates and geographic variation of health care utilization in persons with spinal cord injury (SCI), and to identify factors associated with health care utilization.Setting:Community setting, entire country of Switzerland.Methods:Annual rates of planned and emergency visits to the general practitioner (GP), planned and emergency outpatient clinic visits and in-patient hospitalizations were compared between individuals with chronic SCI, over 16 years of age residing in Switzerland between late 2011 and early 2013 and a population sample (2012) of the Swiss general population. Risk factors for increased health service utilization were identified by means of regression models adjusted for spatial variation.Results:Of 492 participants (86.2% response rate), 94.1% visited a health care provider in the preceding year, with most persons visiting GPs (88.4%) followed by outpatient clinics (53.1%) and in-patient hospitals (35.9%). The increase in utilization as compared with the general population was 1.3-, 4.0- and 2.9-fold for GP, outpatient clinic and in-patient hospital visit, respectively. GP utilization was highest in persons with low income (incidence rate ratio (IRR) 1.85) and old age (IRR 2.62). In the first 2 years post injury, health service visits were 1.7 (GP visits) to 5.8 times (emergency outpatient clinic visits) more likely compared with those later post injury.Conclusions:People with SCI more frequently use health services as compared with the general population, across all types of medical service institutions. GP services were used most often in areas where availability of specialized outpatient clinic services was low.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Ronca, E., Scheel-Sailer, A., Koch, H. G., & Gemperli, A. (2017). Health care utilization in persons with spinal cord injury: Part 2 - Determinants, geographic variation and comparison with the general population. Spinal Cord, 55(9), 828–833. https://doi.org/10.1038/sc.2017.38

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