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Friday
Feb072020

The Visits, They Are A-Changing

By Clive Riddle, February 7, 2020

Many facets of daily American life woven into the fabric of the Greatest Generation and Boomers have been gradually unraveling -  Attending church regularly, Belonging to service clubs, and Golfing for example. Is having a primary care doctor another?

The February issue of the Annals of Internal Medicine features the research article: Declining Use of Primary Care Among Commercially Insured Adults in the United States, 2008–2016.  The authors pose the issue, that despite well documented value to primary care visits and relationships, "there is early evidence of a decline in per capita primary care visit rates, and little is understood about what is contributing to the decline." They conclude: "commercially insured adults have been visiting PCPs less often, and nearly one half had no PCP visits in a given year by 2016. Our results suggest that this decline may be explained by decreased real or perceived visit needs, financial deterrents, and use of alternative sources of care."

 

Their study of 142 million primary care visits among 94 million member-years found that PCP visits declined 24.2%, from 169.5 to 134.3 visits per 100 member-years, while the proportion of adults with no PCP visits in a given year rose from 38.1% to 46.4%. Yet visit rates to specialists remained stable and visits to urgent care, retail clinics, and telehealth increased by 46.9%. They also found that the decline was largest among the youngest adults (−27.6%), healthier patients - those without chronic conditions (−26.4%), and lowest-income area residents (−31.4%).

Prior studies prompted the authors to examine this trend. Some previous indicators include:

  • A study published in the November/December 2019 issue of the Annals of Family Medicine: National Trends in Primary Care Visit Use and Practice Capabilities, 2008-2015, found that PCP visits per capita declined 20% during this time period, while visit duration increased 2.4 minutes per visit, and visits addresses 0.3 more diagnoses and 0.82 more medications per visit. The authors offered the hypothesis that “the decline in primary care visit rates may be explained in part by PCPs offering more comprehensive in-person visits and using more non–face-to-face care.”  But perhaps this could also be explained by an aging case mix (fewer younger people seeking visits) that require more visit intensity.

Further studies and time will tell how much of this generational shift away from PCP visits is due to alternative points of care,  vs. cost issues, vs. changes in perception of the value of primary care, or perhaps – just maybe – PCPs are doing too good a job with younger generations in communicating electronically via patient portals and other means, and participating in plans with nurse call line options and web based care information that renders the lowest level of primary care physician visits unnecessary.

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