Patterns of ambulatory medical care in rural Manitoba, determinants of utilization and the effect of physician practice-modality

Systemic imbalances in the distribution of general practitioners concern rural residents, physicians, and policy-makers. This thesis investigates patterns of medical care utilization in rural Manitoba to discern the "reality" from the "myth" of imbalances in the distribution of p...

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Main Author: Wall, Ronald W.
Language:en_US
Published: 2007
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1655
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spelling ndltd-MANITOBA-oai-mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca-1993-16552014-01-31T03:30:49Z Patterns of ambulatory medical care in rural Manitoba, determinants of utilization and the effect of physician practice-modality Wall, Ronald W. Systemic imbalances in the distribution of general practitioners concern rural residents, physicians, and policy-makers. This thesis investigates patterns of medical care utilization in rural Manitoba to discern the "reality" from the "myth" of imbalances in the distribution of physicians. To overcome methodological limitations of previous work, this research compiled the Manitoba Physician Resource Data Set. By tracking the movement of physicians over the 1990-91 to 1994-95 fiscal years, important workload and explanatory variables were estimated. These, and other data, were analysed to gain insights into the epidemiology of rural ambulatory medical care--that is, the determinants of utilization and the role of practice-modality. From population--physician-supply (macro-level) analysis, imbalances in physician-availability were compensated for by residents' out-of-area care-seeking and adjustments made by physicians in their workloads. Overall, physician-accessibility is comparable across rural Manitoba. Moreover, also through these mechanisms, physician-competition is comparable across rural areas. However, a population's rate of contact and utilization is not predicated on the need for ambulatory physician-visits or physician-availability. Although comparable access was found across small areas, low need populations had relatively higher rates of contact and visits. From practice-profile--physician-practice (meso-level) analysis of the role of payment-modality, fee-for-service group practice provided superior performance: large patient-loads seen, patterns of visits in balance with expected need, and stable physician-practices. These findings, however, may be confounded by self-selection from Manitoba medical graduates concentrated in fee-for-service group practices in the larger rural communities. While stakeholders should be encouraged by the remarkable comparability in physician-accessibility and physician-competition across rural Manitoba, improvements could be made. 2007-05-18T12:15:54Z 2007-05-18T12:15:54Z 1997-12-01T00:00:00Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1655 en_US
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language en_US
sources NDLTD
description Systemic imbalances in the distribution of general practitioners concern rural residents, physicians, and policy-makers. This thesis investigates patterns of medical care utilization in rural Manitoba to discern the "reality" from the "myth" of imbalances in the distribution of physicians. To overcome methodological limitations of previous work, this research compiled the Manitoba Physician Resource Data Set. By tracking the movement of physicians over the 1990-91 to 1994-95 fiscal years, important workload and explanatory variables were estimated. These, and other data, were analysed to gain insights into the epidemiology of rural ambulatory medical care--that is, the determinants of utilization and the role of practice-modality. From population--physician-supply (macro-level) analysis, imbalances in physician-availability were compensated for by residents' out-of-area care-seeking and adjustments made by physicians in their workloads. Overall, physician-accessibility is comparable across rural Manitoba. Moreover, also through these mechanisms, physician-competition is comparable across rural areas. However, a population's rate of contact and utilization is not predicated on the need for ambulatory physician-visits or physician-availability. Although comparable access was found across small areas, low need populations had relatively higher rates of contact and visits. From practice-profile--physician-practice (meso-level) analysis of the role of payment-modality, fee-for-service group practice provided superior performance: large patient-loads seen, patterns of visits in balance with expected need, and stable physician-practices. These findings, however, may be confounded by self-selection from Manitoba medical graduates concentrated in fee-for-service group practices in the larger rural communities. While stakeholders should be encouraged by the remarkable comparability in physician-accessibility and physician-competition across rural Manitoba, improvements could be made.
author Wall, Ronald W.
spellingShingle Wall, Ronald W.
Patterns of ambulatory medical care in rural Manitoba, determinants of utilization and the effect of physician practice-modality
author_facet Wall, Ronald W.
author_sort Wall, Ronald W.
title Patterns of ambulatory medical care in rural Manitoba, determinants of utilization and the effect of physician practice-modality
title_short Patterns of ambulatory medical care in rural Manitoba, determinants of utilization and the effect of physician practice-modality
title_full Patterns of ambulatory medical care in rural Manitoba, determinants of utilization and the effect of physician practice-modality
title_fullStr Patterns of ambulatory medical care in rural Manitoba, determinants of utilization and the effect of physician practice-modality
title_full_unstemmed Patterns of ambulatory medical care in rural Manitoba, determinants of utilization and the effect of physician practice-modality
title_sort patterns of ambulatory medical care in rural manitoba, determinants of utilization and the effect of physician practice-modality
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1655
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