Study design and setting
A retrospective, observational ecological study design was used in the present study. Data on frequency of use of the knowledge base during 2018 was collected from primary health care centers in Stockholm, Sweden.
In parallel, a cross-sectional set of standardized outcome measures were collected from two national and regional quality registries: one containing subjective data of patient experiences in health care encounters and one containing objective data of health care outcomes from diabetes care as shown in Figure 1.
Study material
A total of 24 privately-owned primary health care centers participated in this study. No individual physicians were selected. Eligible participating sites were primary health care centers in Stockholm that used Medibas during full year 2018, and all centers had online access to the Internet. Primary health care centers in Stockholm were chosen because they have individual
IP addresses and are thereby traceable. The knowledge base’s central customer server was used to obtain data on frequency use during 2018 for each primary health care center. A “session” in the knowledge base was defined as one occasion where the user was active on the web site.
The knowledge base
Medibas is a Swedish medical online knowledge base with a focus on primary care (17). The primary target audience is general practitioners, but Medibas also targets other occupational groups in primary care such as nurses and physiotherapists. The aim of the knowledge base is to provide access to evidence-based knowledge in everyday clinical practice. The knowledge base is based on the ‘Norsk Elektronisk Legehåndbok’ (Norwegian Electronic Physician Handbook) which has been used by Norwegian general practitioners since the 1990s and was adapted to Swedish health care in 2013.
The knowledge base used for this study contains more than 4,000 articles and covers a wide range of diagnoses in healthcare. The texts are written by specialists in general medicine and are reviewed and adapted to Swedish guidelines. In addition to facts about symptoms, diagnostics, treatment and follow-up, Medibas also features illustrations and patient information which can be easily printed out. Each text also contains references with direct links to studies in PubMed, the Cochrane library and national or regional guidelines. The content is updated on a weekly basis to include new findings from national and international evidence-based sources of knowledge. Longer texts feature a summary at the beginning to provide an overview. Medibas receives financial support through subscription fees and does not contain advertising or commercial promotion. This knowledge base was chosen for the present study as it is the most comprehensive knowledge base accessible to primary health care centers on a nationwide scale in Sweden. It also contains patient education handouts, which may increase the willingness of patients to be compliant, according to an earlier study (26).
The National Primary Care Patient Survey
The National Primary Care Patient Survey is a recurrent national survey of patient experiences (27). Since 2009, all Swedish health care regions (n=21) have participated and the survey is coordinated by the Swedish Association of Local Authorities and Regions. The survey is carried out every two years and includes both primary and specialized care. The most recent survey in Stockholm was carried out in 2018 (n=57,384) and the response rate was 35.4%. Thus, 20,313 patients responded to the questionnaire. A random sample of patients who had visited primary health care centers received an invitation to respond to a web or postal questionnaire. Confidentiality was ensured and it was not possible to read an individual’s responses when the results were compiled. The questionnaire consisted of seven dimensions on a five to seven graded Likert scale: overall impression, emotional support, participation and involvement, respect and treatment, continuity and coordination, information and knowledge, and accessibility.
The National Diabetes Register
The National Diabetes Register, founded in 1996, has long been a cornerstone of diabetes care in Sweden, providing clinicians with evidence-based information and supporting the improvement of health care quality (28). Both hospitals and primary health care centers input diabetes patient data online, and in return benefit from opportunities to monitor risk factors, receive help in identifying needs for treatment improvements, and minimize the potential consequences of diabetes. The National Diabetes Register currently contains data on 425,000 patients and has a coverage of 97% of all Swedish diabetic patients. Data is either entered manually and reported online or directly by transmission from the patient’s electronic medical records (26). The Swedish Society for Diabetology is the owner of the registry and receives financial aid from the Swedish Association of Local Authorities and Regions. There are over 50 variables for each patient in the National Diabetes Register, e.g. blood pressure, HbA1c and blood lipids.
National quality registries
Data was extracted from the National Primary Care Patient Survey and the National Diabetes Register on a single occasion in April 2019 for the time period of a full 12 months from January to December 2018. Eligible data sets had no missing data. The number of sessions in the knowledge base per listed patient during 2018 were dichotomized into two groups of primary health care centers: frequent and non-frequent users of the knowledge base. We did a binary split into these two groups in order to analyze how outcomes in the National Primary Care Patient Survey and National Diabetes Register were related to frequency of use of the knowledge base.
Care Need Index
Care Need Index is a socio-economic needs index which describes the expected risk of developing ill health based on socio-economic factors on an individual level (25, 29).
The seven variables and their relative weights are:
Care Need Index variable
|
Relative
weight (0-9)
|
- Aged over 65 years and single
|
6.15
|
- Born abroad (Eastern Europe, Asia, Africa or South America)
|
5.72
|
- Unemployed (or in employment measure), 16-64 years
|
5.13
|
- Single parent with children who are 17 years or younger
|
4.19
|
- Persons, aged one year or older, who recently moved into the healthcare center’s catchment area
|
4.19
|
- Low educational status, 25-64 years
|
3.97
|
- Aged under five years
|
3.23
|
The Care Need Index is an estimate to measure the workload of Swedish General practitioners. Compensation for socio-economic weight is paid per listed patient. Based on the socio-economic weight in Care Need Index for each listed person, an index is calculated for the entire primary health care center’s patient list, which then forms the basis for the compensation. Care Need Index is not dependent on the number of visits to the primary health care center. About 60% of the Swedish population (n=10 million) do not sort into a Care Need Index variable while 7-8% of the population have two or more variables. In order to explore whether the outcomes data from the National Primary Care Patient Survey and the National Diabetes Register were influenced by socio-economic weights, we selected Care Need Index as a measure to reveal a potential relationship.
Statistical Analysis
Descriptive statistics (mean and standard deviation) were used to describe the knowledge base user groups and register data (30). The Mann-Whitney test was used to calculate differences between knowledge base user groups (31). We tested dimensions of the National Primary Care Patient Survey against Care Need Index using linear regression (32). In order to test the seven dimensions from the National Primary Care Patient Survey against Care Need Index for the dichotomized user groups, the Care Need Index data, originally showing an uneven distribution
(non-parametric), was transformed to a normal distribution (parametric) using the Johnson Transformation Method (33). Using linear regression, we tested the difference between the National Primary Care Patient Survey dimensions, National Diabetes Register parameters, Care Need Index for the dichotomized user groups. A p-value of <.05 was considered significant for all statistical analyzes. The IBM SPSS statistical software version 26 was used to analyze the data (34).
Research hypothesis
The use of Medibas, an online medical online knowledge base, correlates to health care quality as measured in patient outcome data captured in national quality registries.