Quality in Primary Care Open Access

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Abstract

Is a patient�?¢�?�?��?�?�s type of substance dependence (alcohol, drug or both) associated with the quality of primary care they receive?

Michaela Bitarello do Amaral-Sabadini, Debbie M Cheng, Christine Lloyd-Travaglini, Jeffrey H Samet, Richard Saitz

Background Primary care clinicians’ attitudes may differ based on patients’ substance dependence type (alcohol, other drugs or both). AimThe aim of this study was to evaluate whether substance dependence type is associated with primary care quality (PCQ). Methods We tested the association between substance dependence type and six PCQ scales of the Primary Care Assessment Survey (PCAS) in multivariable linear regression models. We studied alcohol-and/or drug-dependent patients followed prospectively who reported having a PCC (n =427) in a primary care setting. ResultsWe used the Composite International Diagnostic Interview-Short Form to assess substance dependence type and we used the PCAS questionnaire to measure primary care quality. Dependence type was significantly associated with PCQ for all PCAS scales except whole-person knowledge. For the significant associations, subjects with drug dependence (alone or together with alcohol) had lower observed PCAS scores compared with those with alcohol dependence only, except for preventive counselling. ConclusionsDrug dependence was associated with worse PCQ for most domains. Understanding the reasons for these differences and addressing them may help improve the quality of primary care for patients with addictions.