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Canadian Family Physician logoLink to Canadian Family Physician
. 1997 Jul;43:1235–1239.

Where do children go? Comparing the after-hours availability of family physicians and primary care pediatricians in four Canadian cities.

H Patel 1, C Macarthur 1, W Feldman 1
PMCID: PMC2255113  PMID: 9241461

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe and compare family physicians' and pediatricians' after-hours availability for pediatric care in four Canadian cities. DESIGN: Cross-sectional telephone survey. SETTING: Winnipeg, Toronto, Ottawa, and Montreal pediatric and family practices. PARTICIPANTS: All primary care pediatricians and an equal number of family physicians randomly selected from the membership list of the College of Family Physicians of Canada were matched by postal code. Sixty-four (10%) of 282 family physicians and 296 primary care pediatricians were excluded, most because no office telephone number was found. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: "After hours" was defined as between 1800 and 0700 hours on weekdays and 0900 to 2400 hours on weekend days. Outcomes included demographics, year of graduation, day of call, time of call, and availability of physician. RESULTS: Availability varied markedly by city rather than by physicians were available after hours: 92.4% in Winnipeg, 56.0% in Toronto, 65.5% in Ottawa, and 26.9% in Montreal. Winnipeg, Toronto, and Montreal showed no significant differences between specialties in availability. Only Ottawa pediatricians were significantly more available than family physicians when age was taken into account (adjusted relative risk = 2.17, 95% confidence interval = 1.51 to 3.12). Stratified analysis showed no differences by day of call, time of call, or physicians' sex. Physicians graduating before 1975 in both groups tended to be more available in all cities than younger physicians. CONCLUSIONS: Regional differences appear to influence after-hours availability more than specialty. Older physicians from both groups were more available than younger physicians.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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