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How Do the Determinants of Demand for GP Visits Respond to Higher Supply? An Analysis of Grouped Counts

Summary

Although there is a substantial literature on the determinants of demand for primary care, few studies have been able to examine how these determinants respond to higher supply. Some demand studies include supply variables or regional dummy variables to allow for different supply conditions. A few have tested for marginal effects of supply variables attributed at a highly aggregated geographic level. However, relatively little is known about whether there is a supply constraint and how demand responses differ across population groups. We used information from a household survey of 60,806 individuals for whom we had detailed information on supply and access conditions. As in many surveys, the annual measure of utilisation is a grouped count and we estimate a grouped negative binomial model (NegBin2) of the determinants of demand for general practitioner (GP) visits by Maximum Likelihood. We exploit a variable on which respondents were asked to report the convenience with which they were able to access GP services. We demonstrate the significance of this variable in determining the number of GP visits. We then examine which demand determinants are correlated with reported convenience. Finally, we compare the demand equations for respondents reporting unconstrained access to GPs with respondents reporting constrained access. We find that being unemployed has a significant positive effect on GP visits for individuals who reported poor access. People who own a car and reported a good access to GPs have significantly higher visits.

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Correspondence to Paulos Teckle.

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The authors gratefully acknowledge the assistance and expertise of Teresa Bago d’Uva, from Erasmus University Rotterdam, for her assistance in writing the STATA program for grouped counts. They gratefully acknowledge the UK Data Archive, University of Essex, for providing the original data for analysis. Authors bear sole responsibility for the analysis and interpretation.

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Teckle, P., Sutton, M. How Do the Determinants of Demand for GP Visits Respond to Higher Supply? An Analysis of Grouped Counts. Swiss J Economics Statistics 144, 495–513 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF03399264

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