Characterizing the services provided by family physicians in Ontario, Canada: A retrospective study using administrative billing data.

Family physicians in Ontario provide most of the primary care to the healthcare system. However, given their broad scope of practice, they often provide additional services including emergency medicine, hospital medicine, and palliative care. Understanding the spectrum of services provided by family...

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Main Authors: David W Savage, Arunim Garg, Salimur Choudhury, Roger Strasser, Robert Ohle, Vijay Mago
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0316554
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author David W Savage
Arunim Garg
Salimur Choudhury
Roger Strasser
Robert Ohle
Vijay Mago
author_facet David W Savage
Arunim Garg
Salimur Choudhury
Roger Strasser
Robert Ohle
Vijay Mago
author_sort David W Savage
collection DOAJ
description Family physicians in Ontario provide most of the primary care to the healthcare system. However, given their broad scope of practice, they often provide additional services including emergency medicine, hospital medicine, and palliative care. Understanding the spectrum of services provided by family physicians across different regions is important for health human resource planning (HHRP). We investigated the services provided by family physicians in Ontario, Canada using a provincial physician database and administrative physician billing data from 2017. Billing codes were used to define 18 general services that family physicians may provide. We then evaluated variation in the services provided by different physicians based on the physicians' geographic location (north-urban, north-rural, south-urban, and south-rural) and career stage (i.e., years in practice). Ontario had 14,443 family physicians in 2017, with most practicing in urban communities in southern Ontario and only 6.5% practicing in any setting in northern Ontario. In general, rural physicians provided a greater range of services than their urban colleagues. Their practices most often included clinic medicine, mental health services, emergency medicine, palliative care, and hospital medicine. Physicians in urban southern Ontario and those at a more advanced career stage were more likely to provide a narrower range of services. Overall, our findings have the potential to shape HHRP, medical education curriculum development, and clinical services planning in Ontario and elsewhere. Moreover, our results provide policy- and decision-makers with a basis for integrating knowledge of the specific clinical services delivered by family physicians into their future planning, with the goal of ensuring a fit-for-purpose workforce able to meet community healthcare needs.
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spelling doaj-art-5c2bd9416f0844648c33d584d2ceff622025-01-17T05:31:35ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032025-01-01201e031655410.1371/journal.pone.0316554Characterizing the services provided by family physicians in Ontario, Canada: A retrospective study using administrative billing data.David W SavageArunim GargSalimur ChoudhuryRoger StrasserRobert OhleVijay MagoFamily physicians in Ontario provide most of the primary care to the healthcare system. However, given their broad scope of practice, they often provide additional services including emergency medicine, hospital medicine, and palliative care. Understanding the spectrum of services provided by family physicians across different regions is important for health human resource planning (HHRP). We investigated the services provided by family physicians in Ontario, Canada using a provincial physician database and administrative physician billing data from 2017. Billing codes were used to define 18 general services that family physicians may provide. We then evaluated variation in the services provided by different physicians based on the physicians' geographic location (north-urban, north-rural, south-urban, and south-rural) and career stage (i.e., years in practice). Ontario had 14,443 family physicians in 2017, with most practicing in urban communities in southern Ontario and only 6.5% practicing in any setting in northern Ontario. In general, rural physicians provided a greater range of services than their urban colleagues. Their practices most often included clinic medicine, mental health services, emergency medicine, palliative care, and hospital medicine. Physicians in urban southern Ontario and those at a more advanced career stage were more likely to provide a narrower range of services. Overall, our findings have the potential to shape HHRP, medical education curriculum development, and clinical services planning in Ontario and elsewhere. Moreover, our results provide policy- and decision-makers with a basis for integrating knowledge of the specific clinical services delivered by family physicians into their future planning, with the goal of ensuring a fit-for-purpose workforce able to meet community healthcare needs.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0316554
spellingShingle David W Savage
Arunim Garg
Salimur Choudhury
Roger Strasser
Robert Ohle
Vijay Mago
Characterizing the services provided by family physicians in Ontario, Canada: A retrospective study using administrative billing data.
PLoS ONE
title Characterizing the services provided by family physicians in Ontario, Canada: A retrospective study using administrative billing data.
title_full Characterizing the services provided by family physicians in Ontario, Canada: A retrospective study using administrative billing data.
title_fullStr Characterizing the services provided by family physicians in Ontario, Canada: A retrospective study using administrative billing data.
title_full_unstemmed Characterizing the services provided by family physicians in Ontario, Canada: A retrospective study using administrative billing data.
title_short Characterizing the services provided by family physicians in Ontario, Canada: A retrospective study using administrative billing data.
title_sort characterizing the services provided by family physicians in ontario canada a retrospective study using administrative billing data
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0316554
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