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Māori Providers: Primary Health Care delivered by doctors and nurses
The National Primary Medical Care Survey (NatMedCa): 2001/02 Report 3

Date of publication: June 2004

ISBN 0-478-28277-X (Book)
ISBN 0-478-28280-X (Internet)
HP 3853

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Citation: Ministry of Health. 2004. Māori Providers: Primary health care delivered by doctors and nurses:The National Primary Medical Care Survey (NatMedCa): 2001/02 Report 3. Wellington: Ministry of Health.


Disclaimer
The views expressed in this occasional paper are the personal views of the authors and should not be taken to represent the views or policy of the Ministry of Health or the Government. Although all reasonable steps have been taken to ensure the accuracy of the information, no responsibility is accepted for the reliance by any person on any information contained in this occasional paper, nor for any error in or omission from the occasional paper.

Executive Summary

Aims
The National Primary Medical Care Survey was undertaken to describe primary health care in New Zealand, including the characteristics of providers and their practices, the patients they see, the problems presented and the management offered. The study covered private general practices (i.e. family doctors), community-governed organisations, and Accident and Medical (A&M) clinics and Hospital Emergency Departments.
Māori providers were not explicitly sampled, but were derived through the sampling scheme; the Māori providers included in the study are likely to be a significant proportion of Māori providers nationally, based on evidence gathered via a follow-up survey of primary health care providers. Although, it must be noted that the sample of providers cannot be considered nationally representative, as a definitive and validated Māori primary medical care provider population is not known. It was intended to compare data across practice types as well as over time.
Subsidiary aims included gathering information on the activities of nurses in primary health care, trialling an electronic data collection tool and developing coding software.
This report describes the characteristics of practitioners, patients and patient visits for a sample of 14 primary health care practices classified as Māori primary medical care providers. Other reports in the series describe private family doctors, community-governed non-profits, after-hours activities and other types of practice, and will analyse differences in practice content that have occurred over time or that exist between practice settings.
Methods.


Methods
A nationally representative, multi-stage sample of private general practitioners (GPs), stratified by place and practice type, was drawn. Each GP was asked to provide data on themselves and on their practice, and to report on a 25% sample of patients in each of two week-long periods. Over the same period, all community-governed primary health care practices in New Zealand were invited to participate, as were a 50% random sample of all A&M clinics, and four representative Hospital Emergency Departments.

Medical practitioners in private general practices, community-governed non-profit practices and A&M clinics completed questionnaires, as did the nurses associated with them. Patient and visit data were recorded on a purpose-designed form.

To qualify for inclusion in the study, Māori primary medical care providers, as well as employing GPs, had to meet all of the following four Ministry of Health criteria:

Results
The results presented here relate to 28 practitioners (21 doctors and seven practice nurses) employed at 14 Māori provider practices.
The findings include the following:
Conclusions
This is the first paper to report quantitative results on Māori providers of primary medical care. The results indicate that these practices are serving their intended populations and are demonstrating important characteristics of responsiveness to their needs. Care must be taken when interpreting the results of these analyses for two reasons. Firstly, the sampling framework used to enrol participants did not allow for a specific Māori sample and some Māori providers may have been missed. The sample cannot, therefore, be stated to be nationally representative of Māori providers; however it is expected that a reasonable cross-section are included. Secondly, tests of statistical significance have not been undertaken; any apparent differences have not been subjected to statistical scrutiny.

The findings provided here lend support to the policy of Māori provider development. In addition, they suggest Māori providers are increasing access to care for those who live in high deprivation areas. With respect to alignment with government policy, addressing barriers to accessing care and fostering an environment that is conducive to achieving Māori health gain Māori providers are out-performing other providers; the contributing areas are, for example, organisational/governance/management, ethnicity profile of staff, utilisation of community health workers, and the patient register profile. The proportion of Māori doctors working within Māori providers was higher than in other providers. However, this was far less than the proportion of Māori people in the general population, therefore supporting policies to assist Māori health workforce development.




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Report 3 - Maori Providers: Primary Health Care delivered by doctors and nurses (PDF, 903 kB)

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Report 3 Maori Providers - body of the report (PDF, 503 kB)

Report 3 Maori Providers - Appendices and Glossary (PDF, 424 kB)

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Related information

Other NatMedCa 2001/02 reports

General Practitioner Fee Information

Primary Health Care Strategy

Māori Health website