Abstract:
Background: North American patients are experiencing difficulties in securing affiliations with family physicians.
Centralized waiting lists are increasingly being used in Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
countries to improve access. In 2011, the Canadian province of Quebec introduced new financial incentives for
family physicians’ enrolment of orphan patients through centralized waiting lists, the Guichet d’accès aux clientèles
orphelines, with higher payments for vulnerable patients. This study analyzed whether any significant changes were
observed in the numbers of patient enrolments with family physicians’ after the introduction of the new financial
incentives. Prior to then, financial incentives had been offered for enrolment of vulnerable patients only and there were
no incentives for enrolling non-vulnerable patients. After 2011, financial incentives were also offered for enrolment of
non-vulnerable patients, while those for enrolment of vulnerable patients were doubled.
Methods: A longitudinal quantitative analysis spanning a five-year period (2008–2013) was performed using
administrative databases covering all patients enrolled with family physicians through centralized waiting lists in
the province of Quebec (n = 494,697 patients). Mixed regression models for repeated-measures were used.
Results: The number of patients enrolled with a family physician through centralized waiting lists more than
quadrupled after the changes in financial incentives. Most of this increase involved non-vulnerable patients. After
the changes, 70% of patients enrolled with a family physician through centralized waiting lists were non-vulnerable
patients, most of whom had been referred to the centralized waiting lists by the physician who enrolled them, without
first being registered in those lists or having to wait because of their priority level.
Conclusion: Centralized waiting lists linked to financial incentives increased the number of family physicians’ patient
enrolments. However, although vulnerable patients were supposed to be given precedence, physicians favoured
enrolment of healthier patients over those with greater health needs and higher assessed priority. These results
suggest that introducing financial incentives without appropriate regulations may lead to opportunistic use of the
incentive system with unintended policy consequences.