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- Rebecca H Correia, Chris Frank, David Kirkwood, Henry Y H Siu, Aaron Jones, Meredith Vanstone, M Ruth Lavergne, Steve Slade, Glenda Babe, and Andrew P Costa.
- Doctoral candidate in the Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ont, at the time of the study and is now a postdoctoral fellow at Dalhousie University in Halifax, NS.
- Can Fam Physician. 2024 Sep 1; 70 (9): 559569559-569.
ObjectiveTo identify FPs with additional training and focused practice activities relevant to the needs of older patients within health administrative data and to describe their medical practices and service provision in community-based primary care settings.DesignRetrospective cohort study.SettingOntario.ParticipantsFamily physicians with Certificates of Added Competence in care of the elderly from the College of Family Physicians of Canada or focused practice billing designations in care of the elderly.Main Outcome MeasuresEvidence of additional training or certification in care of the elderly or practice activities relevant to the care of older adults.ResultsOf 14,123 FPs, 242 had evidence of additional scope to better support older adults. These FPs mainly practised in team-based care models, tended to provide comprehensive care, and billed for core primary care services. In an unadjusted analysis, factors statistically significantly associated with greater likelihood of having additional training or focused practices relevant to the care of older patients included physician demographic characteristics (eg, female sex, having completed medical school in Canada, residential instability at the community level), primary care practice model (ie, focused practice type), primary care activities (eg, more likely to provide consultations, practise in long-term care, refer patients to psychiatry and geriatrics, bill for complex house call assessments, bill for home care applications, and bill for long-term care health report forms), and patient characteristics (ie, older average age of patients).ConclusionThe FP workforce with additional training or focused practices in caring for older patients represents a small but specialized group of providers who contribute a portion of the total primary care activities for older adults. Health human resource planning should consider the contributions of all FPs who care for older adults, and enhancing geriatric competence across the family medicine workforce should be emphasized.Copyright © 2024 the College of Family Physicians of Canada.
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