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Screening Rates Down With Increasing Patient Panel Size

Increasing panel size linked to decreases in cancer screening, continuity, comprehensiveness of care

THURSDAY, Jan. 14, 2016 (HealthDay News) — The number of patients under a primary care physician’s care (panel size) correlates with cancer screening, continuity, and comprehensiveness dimensions of care, according to a study published in the January/February issue of the Annals of Family Medicine.

Simone Dahrouge, Ph.D., from the University of Ottawa in Canada, and colleagues conducted a cross-sectional, population-based study encompassing 4,195 physicians with panel sizes ≥1,200 serving 8.3 million patients. Data covered 16 quality indicators spanning five dimensions of care.

The researchers found that as panel size increased (from 1,200 to 3,900), the likelihood of being up-to-date on cervical, colorectal, and breast cancer screening showed relative decreases of 7.9, 5.9, and 4.6 percent, respectively. No significant associations with panel size were seen for eight chronic care indicators (four medication-based and four screening-based). Higher panel size was associated with a relative increase of 8.1 percent in the likelihood of individuals with a new diagnosis of congestive heart failure having an echocardiogram (P < 0.001). There was a 10.8 percent increase (P = 0.04) in hospitalization rates for ambulatory-care-sensitive conditions and a 10.8 percent decrease in non-urgent emergency department visits (P = 0.004) in association with increasing panel size. The highest continuity was seen with medium panel sizes (P < 0.001), and increasing panel size correlated with a small decrease in comprehensiveness (P = 0.03).

“Increasing panel size was associated with small decreases in cancer screening, continuity, and comprehensiveness,” the authors write.

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