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RESEARCH AND PRACTICE |
Thomas R. Konrad and Timothy S. Carey are with the Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Daniel L. Howard is with Shaw University, Raleigh, NC. Lloyd J. Edwards and Anastasia Ivanova are with the Department of Biostatistics, School of Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Thomas R. Konrad, PhD, Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research, UNC-CH, 725 MLK Blvd/Airport Rd CB 7590, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7590 (e-mail: bob_konrad{at}unc.edu).
| ABSTRACT |
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To assess the effects of physicianpatient racial concordance and continuity of care on hypertension outcomes, we described patterns of care for hypertension; we used cross-tabulations and repeated measures (generalized estimating equations) analyses with panel survey data from elderly persons interviewed and examined in 1987 and 1990. Continuity of care was associated with recognition of hypertension, receipt of medication, and lower incidence of undetected hypertension. Physician race had little effect, but continuity is important for successful management of hypertension in older persons.
| INTRODUCTION |
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| METHODS |
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Named physicians were matched to licensure files. Anonymous physicians race, age, gender, graduation year, and specialty were linked to the Piedmont Health Survey of the Elderly files that had respondents care site location, demographics, trichotomized self-reported health ("poor" or "fair" vs combined "excellent" and "good"), chronic illness indices23 (hypertension, diabetes, heart disease, stroke, cancer), and dichotomized Katz scale.24 Physician affiliation was (1) discontinuous (naming no physician at least once), (2) switching physicians (naming different physicians at each survey), or (3) continuous (naming same physician both times). A 4-valued racial concordance measure compared physician with patient race. Methods for measuring hypertension-related outcomes are described in Table 1
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2 and t tests. For each repeated outcome, a multivariate linear model was fit with generalized estimating equations, allowing assessment of the effects of multiple predictors across time for each analysis.26,27 Initial analyses tested associations between outcomes and respondentphysician racial dyads and continuity of care; subsequent models controlled for respondent and physician characteristics. Analyses of 2-way interactions between care source, racial dyad, and continuity of care aimed to detect subgroup effects. Subject clustering within physicians was assessed by alternating logistic regression28 to detect patterns of physician clustering of repeated binary outcomes within subjects. Clustering within physicians showed weak or no statistical significance and was not reported. We incorporated Piedmont Health Survey of the Elderly weights into multivariate analyses when possible, but weighting had to include respondents not meeting inclusion criteria. Some strata lacked variation in physician characteristics or had only 1 physician yielding apparent "missing" cases in analyses, affecting more than 31% of the baseline sample. Hence we report full final models run without survey weights; we adjusted for sample design; showed adjusted odds ratios, significance levels, and confidence intervals in a table; and used footnotes for significant covariates. Given numerous statistical tests, P<.01 was considered statistically significant, with .01<P<.05 considered a trend. We used SAS software (SAS Institute Inc, Cary, NC).
| RESULTS |
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No racial differences were evident in age, gender, employment, or disease severity. Fewer African American individuals were married, and, as a group, they had less education, income, and private insurance and more Medicaid. Self-reported health improved, whereas impairment increased for both groups, but racial disparities persisted. Racial groups had parity in "usual source of care" in 1990, but White patients were more likely seeing nearby private physicians; public sources cared for 1 in 3 African American patients and only 1 in 10 White patients. More African American individuals than White individuals lacked regular physicians at both surveys (14.9% vs 5.5%) or named a physician only once (27.5% vs 20.3%). Conversely, more White patients than African American patients had the same physician across surveys (46.7% vs 30.4%). More African American persons reported that a physician had told them they had high blood pressure. Adverse racial differences were largest for severe hypertension, widening between surveys.
Multivariate Analyses
Table 2
shows no significant effects on measured hypertension. There was a tendency for those with discontinuity in care to have had undetected hypertension more often than did those with continuity of care. Compared with White patients with White physicians, African American patients had a lower incidence of undetected hypertension (and of severe hypertension) regardless of physician race. Elderly persons with discontinuous care were more likely to have undetected severe hypertension, but those naming generalist physicians also may have been at risk for having severe hypertension previously undetected. Those who lacked or had switched physicians received fewer hypertension diagnoses and, if diagnosed, took fewer medications compared with those keeping the same physician.
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Conclusion
Unlike cross-sectional, retrospectively self-reported "usual person and place" surveys, we measured longitudinal patientphysician relationships with 2 temporally separated respondent reports, minimizing error in physician characteristics by combining survey and license data. Study limitations include small numbers in one southern state, which omitted nonAfrican American, non-White physicians and patients. Cumulative reduction in cases for multivariate analyses came from a few missing values in many predictors.
Consistent with other chronic disease studies,29 continuity of care entailed better outcomes. Ongoing physician affiliation improved hypertension detection and medication use once diagnosed. Rates of detection in individuals changing physicians sometimes were midway between those without physicians and those keeping the same physician. African American individuals elevated hypertension diagnosis risk was unaffected by physicians race, suggesting widespread awareness of African American persons worse cardiovascular disease prognoses.4,30 African American patients had a lower risk of having undetected severe (stage 2) hypertension, but elderly patients lacking physicians had a higher hypertension risk. Patientphysician racial concordance effects seemed contextually conditioned (e.g., African American patients using public sources of care may use medication more often if their physician is African American, whereas African American patients who switched physicians may use medication more often if their new physician is White).
Regular access to a usual care source and sustained affiliation with a physician can improve the management of hypertension in older African American and White patients. Because African American Medicare beneficiaries are cared for by a subset of African American physicians often in challenging practice situations,31 better understanding of hypertension care may require more longitudinal study of physician availability and the dynamics of physician selection in addition to racial concordance and continuity of care.
| Acknowledgments |
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Physician data were extracted by the North Carolina Health Professions Data System with the permission of the North Carolina Medical Board.
The authors express their appreciation to Carol Porter for programming assistance and to Gerda Fillen-baum and Donald Pathman, who provided important information for preparation of this brief. Special thanks to Larry Logan and Donna Curasi for editorial assistance.
Human Participant Protection
The University of North Carolina Committee on the Protection of Human Subjects approved the research.
| Footnotes |
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Contributors
T. R. Konrad and D. L. Howard originated the study. T. R. Konrad supervised the creation of the databases and participated in all aspects of the study design, analysis, interpretation of results, and writing of the brief. D. L. Howard reviewed the literature, developed the conceptual framework, wrote initial drafts, and reviewed subsequent drafts of the brief. L. J. Edwards contributed to the study design, initiated and conducted the statistical analysis, contributed to the writing of the brief, and reviewed drafts of the brief. A. Ivanova reviewed the databases and contributed to the study design and analysis. T. S. Carey contributed to the writing of the brief and reviewed drafts of the brief.
Accepted for publication June 3, 2005.
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