Inequalities in the prevalence recording of 205 chronic conditions recorded in primary and secondary care for 12 million patients in the English National Health Service.

IF 7 1区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Shaolin Wang, Yiu-Shing Lau, Matt Sutton, Michael Anderson, Christodoulos Kypridemos, Anna Head, Ben Barr, Richard Cookson, Chris Bentley, Laura Anselmi
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Understanding the prevalence of diseases and where it is detected and recorded in healthcare settings is important for planning effective prevention and care provision. We examined inequalities in the prevalence of 205 chronic conditions and in the care setting where the related diagnoses were recorded in the English National Health Service.

Methods: We used data from the Clinical Practice Research Datalink Aurum linked with Hospital Episode Statistics for 12.8 million patients registered with 1406 general practices in 2018. We mapped diagnoses recorded in primary and secondary care in the previous 12 years. We used linear regressions to assess associations of ethnicity, deprivation, and general practice with a diagnosis being recorded in primary care only, secondary care only, or both settings.

Results: 72.65% of patients had at least one diagnosis recorded in any care setting. Most diagnoses were reported only in primary care (62.56%) and a minority only in secondary care (15.24%) or in both settings (22.18%). Black (- 0.08 percentage points (pp)), Asian (- 0.08 pp), mixed (- 0.13 pp), and other ethnicity patients (- 0.31 pp) were less likely than White patients to have a condition recorded. Patients in most deprived areas were 0.27 pp more likely to have a condition recorded (+ 0.07 pp in secondary care only, + 0.10 pp in both primary and secondary care, and + 0.10 pp in primary care only). Differences in prevalence by ethnicity were driven by diagnostic recording in primary care. Higher recording of diagnoses in more deprived areas was consistent across care settings. There were large differences in prevalence and diagnostic recording between general practices after adjusting for patient characteristics.

Conclusions: Linked primary and secondary care records support the identification of disease prevalence more comprehensively. There are inequalities in the prevalence and setting of diagnostic recording by ethnicity, deprivation, and providers on average across conditions. Further research should examine inequalities for each specific condition and whether they reflect also differences in access or recording as well as disease burden. Improving recording where needed and making national linked records accessible for research are key to understanding and reducing inequalities in disease prevention and management.

在英国国民保健服务的1 200万名患者的初级和二级保健中记录的205种慢性病的流行情况不平等。
背景:了解疾病的流行情况以及在卫生保健机构中发现和记录疾病的地点,对于规划有效的预防和护理提供非常重要。我们检查了205种慢性病患病率的不平等,以及相关诊断记录在英国国家卫生服务体系的护理环境中的不平等。方法:我们使用来自临床实践研究数据链Aurum的数据,并与2018年1406家全科诊所注册的1280万名患者的医院事件统计数据相关联。我们绘制了过去12年中在初级和二级保健中记录的诊断。我们使用线性回归来评估种族、剥夺和一般实践与仅在初级保健、仅在二级保健或两者均记录诊断的关系。结果:72.65%的患者在任何医疗机构至少有一次诊断记录。大多数诊断报告仅在初级保健(62.56%),少数仅在二级保健(15.24%)或在两种情况下(22.18%)。黑人(- 0.08个百分点)、亚洲人(- 0.08个百分点)、混血儿(- 0.13个百分点)和其他种族患者(- 0.31个百分点)比白人患者更不可能有疾病记录。最贫困地区的患者出现疾病记录的可能性高出0.27个百分点(仅二级保健为+ 0.07个百分点,初级和二级保健均为+ 0.10个百分点,仅初级保健为+ 0.10个百分点)。不同种族的患病率差异是由初级保健的诊断记录驱动的。在更贫困的地区,更高的诊断记录在整个护理环境中是一致的。在调整患者特征后,在患病率和诊断记录方面存在很大差异。结论:相关的初级和二级保健记录支持更全面地确定疾病流行。在诊断记录的流行程度和设置方面,按种族、贫困程度和提供者的平均水平划分存在不平等。进一步的研究应审查每种具体情况的不平等,以及它们是否也反映了获取或记录以及疾病负担方面的差异。在需要时改进记录并使国家相关记录可用于研究,是了解和减少疾病预防和管理方面不平等现象的关键。
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来源期刊
BMC Medicine
BMC Medicine 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
13.10
自引率
1.10%
发文量
435
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Medicine is an open access, transparent peer-reviewed general medical journal. It is the flagship journal of the BMC series and publishes outstanding and influential research in various areas including clinical practice, translational medicine, medical and health advances, public health, global health, policy, and general topics of interest to the biomedical and sociomedical professional communities. In addition to research articles, the journal also publishes stimulating debates, reviews, unique forum articles, and concise tutorials. All articles published in BMC Medicine are included in various databases such as Biological Abstracts, BIOSIS, CAS, Citebase, Current contents, DOAJ, Embase, MEDLINE, PubMed, Science Citation Index Expanded, OAIster, SCImago, Scopus, SOCOLAR, and Zetoc.
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