| BMC Medicine | |
| Healthcare fragmentation, multimorbidity, potentially inappropriate medication, and mortality: a Danish nationwide cohort study | |
| Research Article | |
| Susan M. Smith1  Morten Fenger-Grøn2  Claus Høstrup Vestergaard2  Line Flytkjær Virgilsen2  Linda Aagaard Rasmussen2  Peter Vedsted3  Anders Prior4  | |
| [1] Discipline of Public Health and Primary Care, Trinity College, University of Dublin, Dublin, Ireland;Research Unit for General Practice, Bartholins Allé 2, 8000, Aarhus C, Denmark;Research Unit for General Practice, Bartholins Allé 2, 8000, Aarhus C, Denmark;Department of Clinical Medicine, Aarhus University, Aarhus C, Denmark;Research Unit for General Practice, Bartholins Allé 2, 8000, Aarhus C, Denmark;Department of Public Health, Aarhus University, Aarhus C, Denmark; | |
| 关键词: Fragmentation; Continuity of care; Healthcare utilization; Multimorbidity; Primary care; | |
| DOI : 10.1186/s12916-023-03021-3 | |
| received in 2023-05-02, accepted in 2023-08-03, 发布年份 2023 | |
| 来源: Springer | |
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【 摘 要 】
BackgroundPatients with multimorbidity are frequent users of healthcare, but fragmented care may lead to suboptimal treatment. Yet, this has never been examined across healthcare sectors on a national scale. We aimed to quantify care fragmentation using various measures and to analyze the associations with patient outcomes.MethodsWe conducted a register-based nationwide cohort study with 4.7 million Danish adult citizens. All healthcare contacts to primary care and hospitals during 2018 were recorded. Clinical fragmentation indicators included number of healthcare contacts, involved providers, provider transitions, and hospital trajectories. Formal fragmentation indices assessed care concentration, dispersion, and contact sequence. The patient outcomes were potentially inappropriate medication and all-cause mortality adjusted for demographics, socioeconomic factors, and morbidity level.ResultsThe number of involved healthcare providers, provider transitions, and hospital trajectories rose with increasing morbidity levels. Patients with 3 versus 6 conditions had a mean of 4.0 versus 6.9 involved providers and 6.6 versus 13.7 provider transitions. The proportion of contacts to the patient’s own general practice remained stable across morbidity levels. High levels of care fragmentation were associated with higher rates of potentially inappropriate medication and increased mortality on all fragmentation measures after adjusting for demographic characteristics, socioeconomic factors, and morbidity. The strongest associations with potentially inappropriate medication and mortality were found for ≥ 20 contacts versus none (incidence rate ratio 2.83, 95% CI 2.77–2.90) and ≥ 20 hospital trajectories versus none (hazard ratio 10.8, 95% CI 9.48–12.4), respectively. Having less than 25% of contacts with your usual provider was associated with an incidence rate ratio of potentially inappropriate medication of 1.49 (95% CI 1.40–1.58) and a mortality hazard ratio of 2.59 (95% CI 2.36–2.84) compared with full continuity. For the associations between fragmentation measures and patient outcomes, there were no clear interactions with number of conditions.ConclusionsSeveral clinical indicators of care fragmentation were associated with morbidity level. Care fragmentation was associated with higher rates of potentially inappropriate medication and increased mortality even when adjusting for the most important confounders. Frequent contact to the usual provider, fewer transitions, and better coordination were associated with better patient outcomes regardless of morbidity level.
【 授权许可】
CC BY
© BioMed Central Ltd., part of Springer Nature 2023
【 预 览 】
| Files | Size | Format | View |
|---|---|---|---|
| RO202309153387030ZK.pdf | 1245KB | ||
| Fig. 8 | 593KB | Image | |
| MediaObjects/12862_2023_2133_MOESM13_ESM.pdf | 359KB | ||
| MediaObjects/40249_2023_1124_MOESM1_ESM.docx | 16KB | Other | |
| 955KB | Image | ||
| Fig. 6 | 271KB | Image |
【 图 表 】
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