Litcius/Paper detail

Patients Living with Social Vulnerabilities Experience Reduced Access at Team-Based Primary Healthcare Clinics

Nadia Deville‐Stoetzel, Isabelle Gaboury, Jeannie Haggerty, Mylaine Breton

2023Healthcare policy13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Objective: This study aims to explore differences in access to care as experienced by patients registered in team-based primary healthcare clinics according to their social vulnerability profile. Method: A total of 1,562 patients from four team-based primary healthcare clinics completed an e-survey conducted between June and November 2021. The social vulnerability index was used to compare the experiences. Results: Patients with low vulnerability consulted at emergency rooms three times more often because their family physician was not available (p = 0.006) than patients with no vulnerability. Lack of continuity was reported two times more often by patients with low vulnerability related to team members not knowing their recent medical history (p = 0.006) and by patients with high vulnerability related to no one being in charge of their file (p = 0.023). Both vulnerable groups reported receiving contradictory information more often than patients with no vulnerability. Conclusion: Patients with high vulnerability experienced more access difficulties related to continuity, interprofessional collaboration and communication with providers.

Topics & Concepts

Vulnerability (computing)MedicineSocial vulnerabilityPrimary careHealth careVulnerability indexFamily medicineEmergency departmentMedical emergencyNursingComputer securityEconomic growthPsychological interventionClimate changeComputer scienceEconomicsEcologyBiologyFood Security and Health in Diverse PopulationsMental Health Treatment and AccessAdolescent and Pediatric Healthcare