# Patients report high information coordination between rostered primary care physicians and specialists: A cross-sectional study

**Authors:** Bahram Rahman, Glenda Babe, Lauren E. Griffith, David Price, Lauren Lapointe-Shaw, Andrew P. Costa

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0307611 · PLOS ONE · 2024-08-22

## TL;DR

This study finds that most patients feel their primary care physicians and specialists share information well, though some factors like age and care model affect this coordination.

## Contribution

The study provides population-based evidence on patient-reported information coordination between primary care and specialists in Ontario.

## Key findings

- Most patients reported good information coordination between primary care physicians and specialists.
- Patients in the enhanced fee-for-service model were more likely to report poor information sharing from primary care to specialists.
- Younger patients and walk-in clinic users were more likely to report poor coordination.

## Abstract

Our study aimed to describe patient experience of information coordination between their primary care physician and specialists and to examine the associations between their experience and their personal and primary care characteristics. We conducted a cross-sectional study of Ontario residents rostered to a primary care physician and visited a specialist physician in the previous 12 months by linking population-based health administrative data to the Health Care Experience Survey collected between 2013 and 2020. We described respondents’ sociodemographic and health care utilization characteristics and their experience of information coordination between their primary care physician and specialists. We measured the adjusted association between patient-reported measures of information coordination before and after respondents received care from a specialist physician and their type of primary care model. 1,460 out 20,422 (weighted 7.5%) of the respondents reported that their specialist physician did not have basic medical information about their visit from their primary care physician in the previous 12 months. 2,298 out of 16,442 (weighted 14.9%) of the respondents reported that their primary care physician seemed uninformed about the care they received from the specialist. Females, younger individuals, those with a college or undergraduate level of education, and users of walk-in clinics had a higher likelihood of reporting a lack of information coordination between the primary care and specialist physicians. Only respondents rostered to an enhanced fee-for-service model had a higher odds of reporting that the specialist physician did not have basic medical information about their visit compared to those rostered to a Family Health Team (OR 1.22, 95% Cl 1.12–1.40). We found no significant association between respondent’s type of primary care model and that their primary care physician was uninformed about the care received from the specialist physician. In this population-based health study, respondents reported high information coordination between their primary care physician and specialists. Except for respondents rostered to an enhanced fee-for-service model of care, we did not find any difference in information coordination across other primary care models.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

51 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11340953/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11340953