How many patients should a family physician have? Factors to consider in answering a deceptively simple question

How many patients should a family physician have? Factors to consider in answering a deceptively simple question

Show full item record

Title: How many patients should a family physician have? Factors to consider in answering a deceptively simple question
Author: Muldoon, Laura; Dahrouge, Simone; Russell, Grant; Hogg, William; Ward, Natalie
Abstract: The ratio of patients to physicians has long been used as a tool for measuring and planning healthcare resources in Canada. Some current changes in primary care, such as enrolment of patients with physicians, make this ratio easier to calculate, while others, such as changing practice structure, make it more complex to interpret. Based on information gleaned from a review of the literature, we argue that before panel size can be used as an accountability measure for individual physicians or practices in primary care, we must understand its relationship to quality and outcomes at individual and population levels, as well as the contextual factors that affect it.
Date: 2012
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10393/22951

Files in this item

Files Size Format View
Muldoon_Laura_2012_How_many_patients.pdf 178.5Kb application/pdf View/Open

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show full item record


Contact information

Morisset Hall (map)
65 University Private
Ottawa ON Canada
K1N 6N5

Tel. 613-562-5800 (4563)
Fax 613-562-5195

ruor@uottawa.ca