# The effect of general practitioners’ sex and age on patients’ healthcare utilization: a Norwegian registry study

**Authors:** Schyler Marie Bennett, Kjartan Sarheim Anthun, Ottar Bjerkeset, Geir Godager, Johan Håkon Bjørngaard, Christina Hansen Edwards

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s43999-026-00086-4 · Research in Health Services & Regions · 2026-02-06

## TL;DR

This study examines how the sex and age of general practitioners in Norway affect patients' use of healthcare services.

## Contribution

The study uses a quasi-experimental design to reduce bias in estimating the impact of GP characteristics on healthcare utilization.

## Key findings

- GP sex and age had small or no associations with patients' healthcare utilization.
- A small negative association was found for non-acute outpatient mental and somatic healthcare.
- GP characteristics are unlikely to strongly influence patients' use of specialist or out-of-hours services.

## Abstract

This study aims to estimate the associations of general practitioner (GP) sex and age with patients’ use of specialist and out-of-hours healthcare services in Norway, using a quasi-experimental design that leverages patient assignment to a GP to reduce bias from patient-GP matching.

Using national registry data on 1,884,665 adult patients assigned to a GP from 2008 to 2021, we exploited quasi-random assignment of patients to GPs to estimate the associations of the assigned GP’s sex or age with patient healthcare utilization in the three years after assignment. Poisson regression analyses were used for binary outcomes (contact/no contact), and linear regressions for continuous measures (number of contact days) of healthcare utilization, each with multi-level fixed effects to adjust for confounding. Analyses were stratified by patient groups defined by history of mental health diagnosis.

GP sex and age generally had small or null associations with healthcare utilization. A small negative association was observed for non-acute outpatient mental and somatic healthcare, but this was not consistent across groups defined by mental health diagnostic history. GP sex or age showed no consistent associations with other outcomes.

As the GP workforce undergoes demographic changes—with an increasing share of younger and female physicians—these results suggest that such characteristics are unlikely to be strongly associated with individual patients’ use of specialist or out-of-hours mental and somatic healthcare services.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s43999-026-00086-4.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** psychiatric (MESH:D001523), substance use disorders (MESH:D019966), Death (MESH:D003643), mental health problems (MESH:D000076082), mental (MESH:D008607)
- **Chemicals:** ppmlhdfe (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

14 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12881246/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12881246