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Do medical alliances truly work? Perspectives on health service utilisation among outpatients with chronic diseases in Shanghai, China.

Authors :
Sun, Wanju
Zhu, Haiyan
Zhang, Linyi
Wang, Zhaoxin
Luo, Li
Qi, Weigang
Qi, Hualin
Hua, Yingxue
Gao, Xiang
Yuan, Ling
Shi, Jianwei
Source :
Australian Journal of Primary Health; 2023, Vol. 29 Issue 4, p332-340, 9p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: To achieve proper health utilisation among various health institutions and improve primary care capacity, China implemented medical alliance (MA) reform as part of healthcare reforms in 2009. With chronic disease management as the focus and priority of primary health institutions, this study aimed to analyse the specific distribution and trends of outpatient visits to various levels of health institutions (community health centres (CHCs) vs hospitals) in MAs. Methods: All outpatient data were extracted from the Chuansha MA in Pudong New Area, Shanghai, between 2016 and 2020, and submitted to descriptive analysis, Chi-Square tests and correlation analysis. Results: This article found that outpatients aged >60 years visited CHCs more than hospitals for some chronic diseases. The adjusted average costs of outpatients presented upward trends both in hospitals and in CHCs. Conclusions: The Chuansha MA worked in guiding older outpatients to visit CHCs, but did not control the increasing medical costs. The Shanghai government should further improve medical capability of CHCs to attract all community-dwelling residents at all ages to implement hierarchical diagnosis and treatment systems, as well as make more efforts to control increasing medical costs. It is important to sink the tasks of chronic diseases management to community health centres. We found the Chuansha Medical Alliance worked in guiding more older outpatients with certain chronic diseases to community health centres rather than hospitals; however, it did not reduce the increasing rate of average medical costs. The Chinese government should undertake more efforts to improve the medical capability of community health centres and control increasing medical costs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14487527
Volume :
29
Issue :
4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Australian Journal of Primary Health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
169952709
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1071/PY22115