Engelsk titel: Variation in patients' sick leave between general practitioner practices
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Författare:
Rudbeck, Marianne
Email: magrr@rn.dk
Språk: Eng
Antal referenser: 21
Dokumenttyp:
Artikel
UI-nummer: 15069445
Sammanfattning
Background: General practitioners (GPs) assess the existence of the patient’s disease, decide
whether the disease affects the patient’s ability to work and if necessary, recommend sick leave. Our
aim was to describe correlations in patients’ sick leave between GP practices (GPPs) in a 5-year
period. Method: The study included 253 GPPs, from 2007 to 2011. The personal numbers of patients
from each GPP were connected to DREAM, a registry at the Danish Ministry of Employment that
includes social welfare payments, including sick leave benefits. We adjusted for patient age, gender,
ethnicity and social differences. Spearman’s rank correlation coefficients (2007 - 2011) were used for
calculating the correlation in adjusted sick leave. Results: The number of patient sick leave weeks
between GPPs varied from 36 to 2,704 sick leave weeks per 1000 patients (18 - 65 years). The
correlation coefficients for adjusted sick leave weeks varied from 0.90 to 0.94 (P < 0.05). Correlations
for the 10 GPPs with the highest number of sick leave weeks and the 10 GPPs with the lowest number
of sick leave weeks were almost as high as the correlations of the total population of GPPs.
Conclusions: The study showed great differences in sick leave between GPPs; however, significant
correlation for adjusted sick leave in each GPP was demonstrated. This may indicate that GPs play
an important role in their patients’ sick leave. The study provides a method to distinguish between
GPPs with low patient sick leave and high patient sick leave in causal studies of sick leave
differences among GPs.