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Avoidable hospitalization after family physician and rural health insurance: interrupted time series and regression analyses, Tehran province, Iran

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2022

Sedigheh Salavati
Affiliation:
Ph.D. Student, Department of Health Management and Economics, School of Public Health, Tehran University of Medical Science, Tehran, Iran
Arash Rashidian*
Affiliation:
Professor, Department of Health Management and Economics, School of Public Health, Tehran University of Medical Science, Tehran, Iran
Hanan Hajimahmoodi
Affiliation:
Doctor, Director General of Family Physician Program, Iran Health Insurance Organization, Tehran, Iran
Sara Ememgholipour
Affiliation:
Associate Professor, Department of Health Management and Economics, School of Public Health, Tehran University of Medical Science, Tehran, Iran
Vida Varahrami
Affiliation:
Associate Professor, Department of Economics, School of Economics and Political Sciences, Shahid Beheshti University, Tehran, Iran
Elham Khodayarimoez
Affiliation:
Ph.D. Student, School of Public Health, University of Alberta, Alberta, Canada
*
Author for correspondence: Dr Arash Rashidian, Department of Health Management and Economics, School of Public Health, Tehran University of Medical Science, Poorsina Avenue, Tehran 1417635173, Iran. E-mail: arashidian@tums.ac.ir
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Abstract

Background

Studying the effect of primary health care development when simultaneously implemented with health insurance schemes assesses effectiveness and use of health care services and gives us insight on how to develop such interventions in different countries.

Aim

To analyze the impact of health insurance and the family physician program on total hospitalizations, and the relation between avoidable hospitalizations and access to family physicians among the rural population in Iran.

Methods

We conducted an interrupted time series (ITS) analysis of monthly hospitalization rates between the years of 2003 and 2014 to assess the immediate and gradual effects of these reforms on total hospitalization rates in the rural areas of Tehran province. In addition, we used a sample of 22 570 hospitalizations between 2006 and 2013 to develop a logistic regression model to measure the association between access to a family physician and avoidable hospitalizations.

Findings

ITS analysis showed that there was an immediate increase of about 1.96 hospitalizations per 1000 inhabitants (P<0.0001, CI=1.58, 2.34) hospitalization rates after the reforms. This was followed by a significant increase of about 0.089 per 1000 inhabitants (P<0.0001, CI=0.07, 0.1). Hospitalization increase continued up to four years after the policy implementation. Following that, hospitalization rates decreased among the rural population (a decrease of 0.066 per 1000, P<0.0001, CI=−0.084, −0.048). Studying the hospitalizations that occurred between 2006 and 2013 showed that there were 4106 avoidable hospitalizations from among a sample of 22 570 hospitalizations. Results of logistic regression models including gender, age and access to family physician variables showed that there was no statistical relation between access to a family physician and avoidable hospitalizations.

Conclusion

Reforms had access effect and caused increased hospital services uses in people with unmet needs. Also the reforms did not decrease avoidable hospitalizations, and therefore had no efficiency effect.

Type
Research
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press

Background

Primary health care (PHC) is the foundation of health care delivery systems and its strength lies in providing access to needed and high-quality health care services (De Maeseneer et al., Reference De Maeseneer, Willems, De Sutter, Van De Geuchte and Billings2007). Family physicians, as the first point of contact between the general population and the health care system, have an important role in strengthening PHC-based health systems (Atun, Reference Atun2004; Van Lerberghe, Reference Van Lerberghe2008).

The effects of primary health care development on hospitalizations are ambiguous. On the one hand, primary health care activities can reduce avoidable hospitalizations by timely delivery of primary services. This is called the efficiency effect (Ricketts et al., Reference Ricketts, Randolph, Howard, Pathman and Carey2001; Dafny et al., 2005). It is necessary to mention that based on existing theories, avoidable hospitalizations (AHs) are an important indicator in measuring the quality or accessibility of PHC (Rosano et al., Reference Rosano, Loha, Falvo, van der Zee, Ricciardi, Guasticchi and Giulio de Belvis2013). On the other hand, primary health care developments can increase referral sensitive hospitalizations by identifying the unmet needs of population in the first stages of health care delivery. Increasing referral sensitive hospitalization is known as access effect (Ricketts et al., Reference Ricketts, Randolph, Howard, Pathman and Carey2001; Dafny and Gruber, Reference Dafny and Gruber2005). Identifying primary health care-related interventions and their effect mechanism – especially when these are simultaneously accomplished with social protection schemes – is important and gives us insight on how to develop such interventions in different countries.

In Iran, in 2005, the family physician program was implemented in all rural areas and towns with a population of <20 000. As part of this reform, about 6000 physicians and 4000 midwives were added to the present PHC network during a time span of three years (Rashidian et al., Reference Rashidian, Joudaki, Khodayari-Moez, Omranikhoo, Geraili and Arab2013). In the family physician program health teams – comprised of a family physician and midwives – were responsible for the health of the population under their coverage. They were also responsible for following up on the patients and following their referral to secondary health care services. Meanwhile, at the same time, the Iran health insurance organization (IHIO) was obliged to cover all rural residents by providing a rural health insurance package. These national reforms aimed to improve the access of the rural population to family physicians services and protect them against financial risk.

The initial aim of policy makers in the implementation of the family physician and health insurance program in Iran was restriction of costs by prevention of disease, reducing referral burdens and avoiding unnecessary services (Majdzadeh, Reference Majdzadeh2012). Previous studies in Iran showed that family physician and rural health insurance reforms had access effect by increasing hospitalization services use among rural residents. However, the efficiency effect of these reforms was not explored (Rashidian et al., Reference Rashidian, Joudaki, Khodayari-Moez, Omranikhoo, Geraili and Arab2013; Salavati et al., Reference Salavati, Rashidian, Hajimahmoodi, Emamgholipour, Varahrami and Kheyr Andish2018; Reference Salavati, Rashidian, Emamgholipour and Varahrami2019;) only a county level study showed the reforms decreased the avoidable hospitalizations but because of special characteristics of the rural population, the results of mentioned study cannot generalized (Salavati et al., 2018; Reference Salavati, Rashidian, Emamgholipour and Varahrami2019). Therefore, we do not have any insight about the effect of reforms on avoidable hospitalizations and the nature of this effect.

In the present study, we first investigated the effect of reforms on hospitalization rates in the Tehran province, in Iran. We then investigated the association between family physician access and avoidable hospitalizations and the effect of demographic characteristics on this association in rural areas.

Methods

Design and setting

The family physician and rural health insurance reforms were implemented in April 2005 in all rural areas and cities with population up to 20 000 across the country. Our study setting was in Tehran province, and we studied any members of the rural population hospitalized in this province.

We conducted an interrupted time series analysis to investigate the effect of national reforms on total hospitalizations (hospitalizations for all conditions). We analyzed the monthly hospitalization rate two years before and eight years after the intervention (132 monthly observations, April 2003 to March 2014).

A retrospective longitudinal study was carried out based on a sample of 22 570 hospitalization data between 2006 and 2013 to explore the association between access to a family physician and avoidable hospitalizations. As there are no pre-determined AHs codes for Iran, we identified a list of 61 potential AHs codes based on the literature review (Caminal et al., Reference Caminal, Starfield, Sánchez, Casanova and Morales2004; Purdy et al., Reference Purdy, Griffin, Salisbury and Sharp2009; Freund et al., Reference Freund, Campbell and Geissler2013). We got some physicians opinions about accuracy of these codes also were used them in another study in Iran as AHs (Salavati et al., 2018; Reference Salavati, Rashidian, Emamgholipour and Varahrami2019).

The avoidable hospitalization codes included in this study are for angina, asthma, cellulitis, congestive heart failure, convulsions and epilepsy, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, dehydration and gastroenteritis, ear, nose and throat infections, gangrene, hypertension, Influenza and pneumonia, nutritional deficiency, other vaccine-preventable diseases, pelvic inflammatory disease, pyelonephritis, dyspepsia and other stomach function disorders and migraine/acute headache. Each of these diagnosis classifications comprises several AH codes, which result in a total of 61 codes.

In order to conduct ITS analysis we received the population data from the Statistical Center of Iran and the health insurance coverage and monthly hospitalization data from the IHIO. No sampling methods were used in this study, and all hospitalization rate data between April 2003 to March 2014 were included in the study.

As no comprehensive database was found for data extraction, the longitudinal study was conducted using various databases to obtain diagnostic codes, gender, age, length of stay and cost per each rural hospitalization. We extracted the diagnostic codes, age and sex of each hospitalization which had been registered, based on the insurance serial number of Tehran residents from Tehran Deputy of Iran Health Insurance Organization database. In the next step, we identified the national code number of each hospitalized patient based on their insurance serial number with the aid of a database developed by the IHIO. The patients’ geographical address was found using their national number. Eventually, we obtained a sample of 22 570 hospitalizations, after removing unclear and ambiguous data. In order to assess the level of access of the rural population to a family physician, we used the Health Networks Development Plan developed by the Ministry of Health and Medical Education. This plan shows the existing health care centers in each rural area. As some rural areas may not have a health care center, and family physicians are not available in all rural areas, we categorized rural areas based on their access to a family physician into four groups: (1) villages with rural primary health centers with the permanent presence of a family physician, (2) rural areas with ‘health houses’ and the temporary presence of family physicians, (3) rural areas with no health centers that are covered by villages with health houses and are known as ‘satellite villages’ and (4) rural areas without any health centers that are visited by mobile health teams including family physicians once or twice a month and are known as ‘remote villages.’ Villages with PHC centers have the highest, and remote villages have the lowest access to family physicians, respectively.

Analysis

We conducted ITS analysis to assess the short- and long-term effect of reforms on the total hospitalization rate of rural residents. We defined each observation as the number of hospitalizations per month divided by the total population under coverage of the health insurance during the course of one year. This was done to counteract the population growth problem. The Augmented Dickey Fuller test showed that the rural hospitalization rate trend is a stationary series (test statistic: −4.75; values: −4, −3.44, −3.14; CI: 99%, 95%, 90%; P=0.0006). We used the Interrupted Time Series Analysis package of Stata version 13.0 for the analysis. We also used the Actest program to diagnose higher order auto-correlations in primary estimated ITS model. As higher auto-correlation was seen on 12 lags, we considered it in estimation of the final time series model. It is necessary to mention that auto-correlation of residuals on 12 lags in the basic model was … in order to the fact that hospitalizations was monthly and for 11 years consecutively. The observed 12 (month) lag was expected, as hospitalization patterns usually follow seasonal and sometimes monthly patterns.

The logistic regression model was developed to assess the probability of decreased AHs in response to increased access to a family physician. We included gender, age and access to a physician as independent variables in the model, and after development of the model we conducted some diagnostic tests. Linktest results showed no specification errors in the Logit model. Hosmer and Lemshow statistics showed Goodness-of-fit and there was no co-linearity between the independent variables.

Also, we conducted a χ 2 test to determine if there was a statistical relation between age, gender and type of hospitalization. We also conducted two independent samples test to explore the differences in average LOS and hospitalization costs between avoidable and unavoidable hospitalizations. It is worthy of note that hospitalization costs were adjusted based on the health care services price index for the first year of study and then were converted from Iranian Rials (IRR) into international dollars ($Int), based on purchasing power parities. All analyses were conducted by STATA version 13 and SPSS version 18 software.

Results

Table 1 presents ITS model estimation. ITS analysis results showed that the initial total hospitalization rate was 1.63 per 1000 population with a small secular increase in hospitalization rate estimated at 0.017 per 1000 inhabitants per month (P<0.0001, CI: 1.51–1.74) (Table 1). We saw the first interruption in April 2006, one year after the start of the interventions and there was an immediate increase of about 1.96 hospitalizations per 1000 inhabitants (P<0.0001, CI: 1.58–2.34). The gradual monthly increase in hospitalization rates also shifted upward, and a further 0.089 hospitalization per 1000 inhabitants per month (P<0.0001, CI: 0.07–0.1) was observed, compared with the secular pre-interruption trend.

Table 1 Coefficients of segmented regression model for hospitalization rates before and after the interventions

Identification of another interruption point three years after the first interruption (and four years after the decision to start the policy) demonstrated that the increase in hospitalization discontinued in April 2009. Results showed a decrease in hospitalization level at this point around 0.72 per 1000 inhabitants (P=0.01, CI: −1.29 to −0.13). A decrease in slope of about 0.066 per 1000 rural population is also witnessed beyond this second interruption point (P<0.0001, CI: −0.08 to −0.05) (Figure 1).

Fig. 1 Interrupted time series analysis with Newey-West standard errors and 12 lags on rural hospitalizations rate

Analysis of hospitalizations between the years 2006 and 2013 showed that there were 4106 avoidable hospitalizations among a sample of 22 570 hospitalizations (18.2% of total hospitalizations). Both avoidable and unavoidable hospitalizations number showed an increase over the years of study, especially in the first three years (Figure 2).

Fig. 2 Number of hospitalizations after the family physician reform (2006–2013)

Table 2 presents some characteristics of avoidable and unavoidable hospitalizations. The results of χ 2 test showed that avoidable and unavoidable hospitalization rates statistically varied among different age groups (P<0.0001, df=7, χ 2=1292). Hospitalization rates are also statistically different among men and women (P<0.0001, df=1, χ 2=89.139).

Table 2 Descriptive statistics of avoidable and unavoidable hospitalizations characteristics (2006–2013)

The results of independent sample t-test showed that the average length of stay (t=3.15, P=0.002) in avoidable hospitalizations are higher than unavoidable hospitalizations. There was not any statistical difference between costs of avoidable and unavoidable hospitalizations.

Avoidable and unavoidable hospitalizations are significantly different in areas with different access to a family physician (P=0.009, df=3, χ 2=11) (Table 2).

The results of logit regression models are presented in Table 3. Based on Akaike information criterion model 2 was preferred. Based on model 2, there is no relation between access to a family physician and avoidable hospitalization. Also, the odds of avoidable hospitalizations in men are 15% higher than women. The elderly (over 70 years old) have higher avoidable hospitalizations compared with other age groups.

Table 3 The logistic regression model between access to family physician, gender, age and avoidable hospitalization

Discussion

While rural insurance and family physician policy was rolling out in Iran (and in Tehran province) in 2005, the policy effects on hospitalization rate were visible within a year after the initiation of the program. The increases in hospitalization trends continued up to three years after the first effect of reforms. In addition, we explored a sample of hospitalizations for the first seven years after the interventions and showed that both avoidable and unavoidable hospitalizations had grown during the period. This finding followed the pattern of increase in total hospitalization rates. We also noted that avoidable hospitalizations were not related to access to a family physicians, therefore we can say that the reforms did not have the expected efficiency effect through reducing avoidable hospitalizations.

These results are similar to the previous research conducted in Lorestan, a deprived province in Iran, in which the hospitalization rate slope increased until 40 months after the interventions but then returned back to the base line slope witnessed before the interventions. We can say that the reforms had a similar effect in both provinces. Even though Tehran as the capital of Iran is a non-deprived province, but the rural population encountered financial barriers in accessing hospitalization services before the interventions, and the reforms responded to the unmet needs of rural residents.

Based on a similar study that explored the effect of reforms across the country, the first effect was seen one year after the reforms implementation, and the increase in hospitalization continued up to 2 years after this first effect (Salavati et al., Reference Salavati, Rashidian, Emamgholipour and Varahrami2017a; Reference Salavati, Rashidian, Hajimahmoodi, Emamgholipour, Varahrami and Kheyr Andish2017b). Therefore the effect of reforms is visible in terms of access effect in both country and province level.

Studies that explored the effect of expanding the basic medical insurance schemes in China and the public health insurance of children, covered by Medicaid in the United States showed similar results (Dafny and Gruber, Reference Dafny and Gruber2005; Wang et al., Reference Wang, Liu, Li and Liu2014). Theoretically, the positive effect of health insurance expansion on the use and cost of health services and inpatient utilization has been approved (Buchmueller et al., Reference Buchmueller, Grumbach, Kronick and Kahn2005). Therefore, it seems that developing universal health coverage in underserved areas results in higher hospitalizations that eventually lead to increased health care system expenditure that is in addition to the initial costs of reforms implementation in these health systems.

However, we should be cautious when talking about the efficiency effect of reforms in this study because in our study, the AHs comprised 22% of total hospitalizations after the reforms and showed a gradual decrease in the subsequent seven years, eventually amounting to 17% of total hospitalizations. This is seen alongside the increase of the life expectancy in Iran, and an increase in the burden of non-communicable diseases in recent years (Shahraz et al., Reference Shahraz, Forouzanfar, Sepanlou, Dicker, Naghavi, Pourmalek, Mokdad, Lozano, Vos, Asadi-Lari, Sayyari, Murray and Naghavi2014). Therefore, if the percentage of AHs compared with total hospitalizations can remain fixed, this can itself be a sign of the efficiency effect of reforms.

Some previous study results are in confirmation of our results in terms of their being no relation between access to physicians and avoidable hospitalization. Physician supply in Colombia was not associated with AHs in rural areas, even though the negative relation was present in urban areas (Laditka et al., Reference Laditka, Laditka and Probst2005). Provision of chronic disease care services at the primary level for diabetes was associated with lower hospitalizations in London; however, this did not stand true for asthma (Saxena et al., Reference Saxena, George, Barber, Fitzpatrick and Majeed2006). The supply level of physicians and their distribution had little effect on ambulatory care sensitive conditions in Medicaid beneficiaries in the United States (Krakauer et al., Reference Krakauer, Jacoby, Millman and Lukomnik1996). Every preventive visit was related to an insignificant decrease in avoidable hospitalization risk among urban children in the United States (Steiner et al., Reference Steiner, Braun, Melinkovich, Glazner, Chandramouli, LeBaron and Davidson2003).

Contrary to our results, a systematic review showed that adequate primary care physician supply and long-term relationships between physicians and patients reduce hospitalizations for chronic ambulatory care sensitive conditions (Van Loenen et al., Reference Van Loenen, Van Den Berg, Westert and Faber2014). A study in Canada suggested that continuity of PHC is related with decreased ambulatory care sensitive conditions (Menec et al., Reference Menec, Sirski, Attawar and Katz2006). In Sweden, there was a negative relation between general practitioners’ visits and AHs (Lindström et al., Reference Lindström, Engström, Bengtsson and Borgquist2003). Also in Germany, AHs were related to the density of physicians in different areas (Freund et al., Reference Freund, Campbell and Geissler2013). With higher access to primary care, the continuity of care resulted in a decrease in preventable hospitalizations in Taiwan (Cheng et al., Reference Cheng, Chen and Hou2010). Almost all of these studies were conducted in developed countries and considered the effect of physician supply on AHs. It seems some structural and technical characteristics of family physician program like number of physicians per population, continuity of care, presence of disease management guidelines and programs, etc. effect on this program outcomes. For example, the continuity of family physician care in rural areas in Iran and its effect on AHs is a matter that requires more study.

Some studies investigated the effect of introducing new PHC programs on AHs and presented results that were opposite to ours. For example, there was a negative relationship between being under coverage of a health maintenance organization and hospitalization for ambulatory care sensitive conditions among children in the United States (Friedman and Basu, Reference Friedman and Basu2001). The family health program coverage among children under five years of age had a protective effect against avoidable hospitalizations of these children in Brazil (Carvalho et al., Reference Carvalho, Mota and Dourado2015). Based on diverse results we can say that the results of exploring the PHC expansion effect on AHs may differ according to the type of health-care system, type of investigated subjects and methods of analysis (Rosano et al., Reference Rosano, Loha, Falvo, van der Zee, Ricciardi, Guasticchi and Giulio de Belvis2013). Also, the quality of development and implementation of a new program can affect its outcome.

Our study results showed significantly higher AHs among men. Study on the effectiveness of community based and family-oriented primary health care programs in decreasing AHs showed that these programs were less effective among men (Guanais and Macinko, Reference Guanais and Macinko2009). Gender has been introduced as a factor to affect patients’ behavior in insurance coverage-based utilization (Buchmueller et al., Reference Buchmueller, Grumbach, Kronick and Kahn2005). In this study, it seems men were more often in a condition that led to hospitalization than women when referring to family physicians. This may be due to men visiting family physicians in rural areas less frequently because of their agricultural responsibilities.

In the present study, we found a higher length of stay and increased costs in avoidable hospitalizations. It can be noted that trying to decrease these types of hospitalizations can lead to decreased hospitalization costs. Therefore, the appropriateness of the primary care services provided by family physicians in rural areas should be the focus point of policy makers.

This study has several strengths. ITS designs are the strongest quasi-experimental designs to estimate intervention effects in nonrandomized settings and our study utilized this method in assessing the reforms effect on total hospitalization rates. We considered the effect of reforms on both total and avoidable hospitalizations; therefore the results present a comprehensive picture of the reforms effect and clarify both the access and efficiency effect of the reforms for policy makers. We explored the interventions effect with a large number of observations in ITS analysis and a large sample in investigating the association between access to physician and AHs. This allows for high power in testing the hypothesis and reaching reliable results.

Limitations

The ITS analysis was carried out to assess the impact of reforms on total hospitalization rates. However, we did not use a control group to ensure that the immediate and long-term effects seen were due to these interventions, and no other factors or co-interventions were involved. Some variables such as socio-economic factors, the demographic characteristics of the population, co-morbidities and primary health care specifications are known factors that affect hospitalization (Goddard and Smith, Reference Goddard and Smith2001; Ansari, Reference Ansari2007). However, we did not consider these factors in exploring the association between access to a family physician and potentially avoidable hospitalizations. However, the exclusion of rural areas was indirectly considered in classifying rural areas into four groups based on their access to family physician. This is because in Iran, it can be said that rural areas with lower access to physicians have a lower economical and welfare status, although this cannot be confidently claimed.

Conclusion

The family physician program and expansion of health insurance had an access effect and resulted in increased population use of hospital services, which may be due to identification of the unmet needs of population. The reforms did not have an efficiency effect through decreasing avoidable hospitalizations. In designing universal health coverage, policy makers should consider the expenditures that rise because of the use of more services. Also, items such as promoting appropriateness and effectiveness in using these services to contain the costs of avoidable hospitalizations should be taken into account. Although the rural areas included in the study were within Tehran Province, a province with the highest number of physicians and hospital beds per capita of population, we observed important unmet needs. These could have occurred due to financial barriers to access or uneven distribution of doctors and hospital beds within the province (Chavehpour et al., Reference Chavehpour, Rashidian, Raghfar, Emamgholipour sefiddashti and Maroofi2017). Hence, a closer look at the distribution of doctors within the rural areas of the province is recommended. Rural areas in Tehran province should be treated similarly to other deprived areas of the country in terms of provision of access to medical care.

Financial Support

This work was supported by Deputy of Research in Tehran University of Medical Sciences (grant number 30317).

Conflicts of Interest

There are no conflicts of interest.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank the Iranian Health Insurance Organization for their support in providing them with the study data. Also, they thank Deputy of Research in Tehran University of Medical Sciences for financial support of this study.

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Figure 0

Table 1 Coefficients of segmented regression model for hospitalization rates before and after the interventions

Figure 1

Fig. 1 Interrupted time series analysis with Newey-West standard errors and 12 lags on rural hospitalizations rate

Figure 2

Fig. 2 Number of hospitalizations after the family physician reform (2006–2013)

Figure 3

Table 2 Descriptive statistics of avoidable and unavoidable hospitalizations characteristics (2006–2013)

Figure 4

Table 3 The logistic regression model between access to family physician, gender, age and avoidable hospitalization