Economic analysis of physician assistants in Ontario [electronic resource]
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Centre for Health Economics and Policy Analysis (CHEPA), McMaster University
Abstract
We conducted a literature review of studies on Physician Assistants working in a variety of settings and found few evaluation studies on the costs and/or effectiveness of Physician Assistants in primary care practices, Emergency Departments and in hospital settings other than Emergency Departments. The existing literature is limited because of the non-Canadian settings in which most studies have been performed and because of the non-experimental study designs, which are subject to potential bias. In addition, the research questions that have been addressed have tended to ignore what would appear to be the most important comparison: that between Physician Assistants and other non-physician providers such as Nurse Practitioners. The evidence we found on the cost-effectiveness of PAs is anecdotal and difficult to translate in the Ontario context. We conclude that it is difficult to make use of the existing literature. We recommend that MOHLTC consider options for funding a randomized control trial that might involve several trial arms in the particular sectors of relevance to the PA program, for example: physician only; physician and PA; physician and NP; and physician, NP and PA. The purpose of this would be to explore the difference in costs and effects on the different service modalities. This would also provide sufficient information to support modelling the short-run effects that could be expected from allocating the same amount of resources to the different service modalities as well as the implications for physician resources planning.
Description
Amiram Gafni, Stephen Birch, Gioia Buckley.
"December 19, 2011."
Issued as part of the Canadian Electronic Library, Documents collection, and Canadian health research collection.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 18-20, xxi-xxiii).
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
"December 19, 2011."
Issued as part of the Canadian Electronic Library, Documents collection, and Canadian health research collection.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 18-20, xxi-xxiii).
Mode of access: World Wide Web.