TY - JOUR T1 - Patients’ experience of chronic illness care in a network of teaching settings JF - Canadian Family Physician JO - Can Fam Physician SP - 1366 LP - 1373 VL - 58 IS - 12 AU - Janie Houle AU - Marie-Dominique Beaulieu AU - Marie-Thérèse Lussier AU - Claudio Del Grande AU - Jean-Pierre Pellerin AU - Marie Authier AU - Réjean Duplain AU - Tri Minh Tran AU - François Allison Y1 - 2012/12/01 UR - http://www.cfp.ca/content/58/12/1366.abstract N2 - Objective To evaluate chronic illness care delivery from the patient’s perspective and to examine its main correlates. Design Cross-sectional, descriptive study using questionnaires and medical chart review. Setting Nine teaching family practices in Quebec. Participants A total of 364 patients with diabetes, hypertension, or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Main outcomes measures Score on the Patient Assessment of Chronic Illness Care (PACIC) questionnaire, which evaluates the patient’s perspective on the care received based on the chronic care model (CCM); patients characteristics (sex, level of education, number of chronic illnesses); patient-physician relationship (relational continuity, interpersonal communication assessed from the patient’s perspective); and interdisciplinary care and technical quality of care abstracted from patients’ medical charts. Results The mean PACIC score obtained (2.8 out of 5) indicates that, on average, CCM-concordant care “generally did not occur” or occurred only “sometimes” in this network of teaching practices. However, with a mean technical quality-of-care score of nearly 80%, physicians in this network showed a high degree of adherence to clinical guidelines for the chronic illnesses under study. Patient education level lower than high school was negatively associated with PACIC scores, while positive associations were found with male sex, number of chronic illnesses, relational continuity, interpersonal communication, interdisciplinary care, and technical quality of care. Conclusion Patients with less education reported receiving less CCM-concordant care. The patient-physician relationship was the strongest correlate of PACIC scores, while interdisciplinary care and technical quality of care had modest contributions. ER -