12 research outputs found

    Rifapentine access in Europe: growing concerns over key tuberculosis treatment component

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    [No abstract available]Support statement: C. Lange is supported by the German Center of Infection Research (DZIF). All other authors have no funding to declare for this study. Funding information for this article has been deposited with the Crossref Funder Registry

    No physician gender difference in prescription of sick-leave certification: A retrospective study of the Skaraborg Primary Care Database

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    Background and aims: Sickness insurance is a hallmark of most welfare states. The rising costsof sickness insurance in Sweden have been attributed to varying sickness certification practices among physicians. Other factors, such as the gender and socioeconomic status of the patient, or the experience of the physician, may affect the rate of sickness certification. The importance of these factors alone and in relation to each other has been the focus of the two first studies in this thesis. The government introduced new reforms, the so-called “sick leave billion”, in 2006 to improve the quality of the sick leave process and reduce the costs of sickness insurance. It is of interest to investigate how these reforms have affected the quality of the sick leave process and the physicians’ views of their working conditions. Symptom diagnoses (R diagnoses) in sickness certificates are easy to capture in national registries and have been shown to predict poor certificate quality. The potential usefulness of this marker was investigated in the third study. Primary health care physicians consider sickness certification problematic. The aim of the fourth study was to investigate whether the views of physicians changed after the introduction of the reforms. Methods: Study I and II: Retrospective study of computerised medical records from 24 Primary Health Care Centres (PHCCs), 589 physicians and 88,780 patients in 2005. Study I: Comparison of sickness certification rates and duration between physicians of different gender and experience. Study II: Multilevel logistic regression analysis of variations in sickness certification at three levels: patients (n = 64,354: gender, age, socio-economic status, workplace factors and diagnoses); physicians (n = 574: gender and experience), and PHCCs (n = 24). Study III: Retrospective study of computerised medical records and texts from sickness certificates from PHCCs, 2013-2014. Patients with a symptom diagnosis (SD) in the certificate, n = 222, and controls with disease-specific diagnoses, n=222, matched for sex and age, were compared concerning health care consumption, quality of the text in the certificates, duration of sick leave and time to contact for rehabilitation. Study IV: Qualitative design, six focus group interviews were performed in PHCCs in Västra Götaland in 2015, including GPs, interns, GP trainees and locums (n = 28). Qualitative content analysis was used to explore the views of physicians on the sickness certification process after introduction of the reforms. Conclusions: Physicians of different gender handle sickness certification in a similar way. GPs issued certificates of longer duration. In the multilevel model, the most important factors for variation in sickness certification were patient-related (diagnosis and socioeconomic status) and the physician’s contribution was small. Symptom diagnoses in the certificate were associated with higher health care consumption and poorer quality of the sick leave process. The focus group interviews showed that the physicians perceived the sickness certification process as emotive and a challenge to master, with different demands and expectations from the management and the patients
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