Erschienen in:
02.11.2020 | Original Research
Residents’ Willingness to Maintain Contracts with Family Doctors: a Cross-sectional Study in China
verfasst von:
Chao Wang, Ph.D, Shijiao Yan, Ph.D, Heng Jiang, Ph.D, Zhiqiang Nie, Ph.D, Mia Miller, Ph.D, Yan He, Ph.D, Yingying Guo, M.M, Yong Gan, Ph.D, Qingfeng Tian, Ph.D, Chuanzhu Lv, M.D, Zuxun Lu, Ph.D
Erschienen in:
Journal of General Internal Medicine
|
Ausgabe 3/2021
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Abstract
Background
Most previous studies of the family doctor contract services (FDCS) evaluated its quality by using residents’ signing rates, awareness, and satisfaction. We hypothesize that renewal willingness could be another important indicator to examine the quality of FDCS.
Objective
To measure residents’ willingness to maintain contracts with family doctors and examine the influencing factors.
Design
Cross-sectional study.
Participants
11,250 residents in 31 provincial administrative regions across China.
Main Methods
A multistage stratified random sampling method was used to recruit participants. Univariate analysis, mixed-effect regression model analysis, and stepwise multivariate logistic regression analysis were performed to determine the influencing factors of residents’ willingness to maintain contracts with family doctors.
Key Results
About 71.3% participants who contracted with and received healthcare services from family doctors were willing to maintain contracts with family doctors in China. Residents registering as local households (OR = 1.192, 95% CI = 1.039–1.368), enrolled in medical insurance (OR = 1.299, 95% CI = 1.011–1.668), reporting better health (OR = 1.246, 95% CI = 1.100–1.413), with shorter walking time to the nearest healthcare center (compared with > 30 min walking time, < 15 min: OR = 1.209, 95% CI = 1.003–1.458; 15–30 min: OR = 1.288, 95% CI = 1.124–1.475), and trusting in (OR = 4.403, 95% CI = 3.849–5.036) and satisfied with (OR = 18.514, 95% CI = 16.195–21.165) their family doctors had significantly higher willingness to maintain contracts with family doctors.
Conclusions
Residents’ willingness to maintain contracts with family doctors could be another evaluation indicator of the quality of FDCS in China. Improving the accessibility and quality of healthcare services from family doctors may increase residents’ willingness to keep contracts with family doctors and promote the implementation of FDCS.