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Equitable access to primary health care in Germany: addressing access dimensions to reduce geographic variation

Because of evidence of regional variation in health and healthcare use, this thesis used health equity and access to care theory to examine regional differences in access to primary care, using survey- as well as secondary data in four empirical studies.
First, a systematic literature review was used to categorize forms and reasons for regional healthcare shortages and access barriers, with a particular focus on rural areas. After information extraction from the selected studies and a thematic content analysis, the forms and causes identified in the literature were grouped and discussed.
Following the literature-based review of these thematic foundations, a study was then designed to evaluate patient-reported access to primary care in exemplary German regions and assess empirical differences in rural vs. urban populations. This allowed the importance to patients of different access dimensions to be evaluated. For a subgroup of study participants with multidisciplinary care needs, care coordination failures and the supportive role of the general practitioner as a primary point of access was investigated.
Finally, regional factors that are associated with variations in need, health, and utilisation beyond individual health determinants were identified, and placed on different regional framework conditions. These health-related factors were summarised in a regional deprivation measure and small-scale regions in Germany were differentiated by their regional deprivation by the main dimensions (material, social, ecological). Finally, their association to regional health outcomes were cross-sectionally estimated.
To reduce unwarranted access variation, while also taking the patient perspective (by region) into account, the thesis concludes with a chapter on implications. Here, concepts for regional and multidimensional access monitoring, as well as further regulatory measures in capacity and distribution planning of primary care, are discussed.:Content
Tables ........................................................................................................................... V
Figures ....................................................................................................................... VI
Abbreviations ........................................................................................................... VII
1. Background and research objectives .................................................................. 9
1.1. Health equity and access to health care ........................................................ 10
1.2. Regional variation as a contradiction to the equity principle ....................... 16
1.3. Reducing unwarranted regional variation in health care .............................. 20
1.4. Research objectives and thesis structure ...................................................... 24
References ............................................................................................................... 28
Legal sources .......................................................................................................... 33
2. Rural health care shortages and access barriers ............................................. 34
3. Regional access and satisfaction with primary care........................................ 35
Appendix 3 .............................................................................................................. 36
4. Access to primary care and outpatient care coordination .............................. 48
4.1. Introduction .................................................................................................. 49
4.2. Background ................................................................................................... 51
4.2.1. The patient perspective of care coordination ......................................... 51
4.2.2. Coordinating mechanisms ..................................................................... 52
4.3. Methods ........................................................................................................ 55
4.3.1. Data collection and sample .................................................................... 55
4.3.2. Measures ................................................................................................ 55
4.3.3. Data analysis .......................................................................................... 58
4.4. Results .......................................................................................................... 59
4.5. Discussion and limitations ............................................................................ 62
4.6. Implications .................................................................................................. 65
References ............................................................................................................... 69
Appendix 4 .............................................................................................................. 73
5. Area deprivation and its impact on health ....................................................... 76
6. Summary of implications ................................................................................... 77
6.1. Establishing a framework to assess primary care access and performance .. 77
6.2. Strengthening patient involvement in health care structure planning .......... 81
6.3. Strengthening access to GPs as outpatient care coordinators ....................... 84
6.4. Including regional deprivation factors in health care structure planning ..... 86
References ............................................................................................................... 90

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:DRESDEN/oai:qucosa:de:qucosa:79877
Date12 July 2022
CreatorsWeinhold, Ines
ContributorsKarmann, Alexander, Schipp, Bernhard, Technische Universität Dresden
Source SetsHochschulschriftenserver (HSSS) der SLUB Dresden
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion, doc-type:doctoralThesis, info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis, doc-type:Text
Rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Relation10.1016/j.healthpol.2014.07.018, 10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.06.019, 10.1515/roe-2019-0001

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