Transcript
Page 1: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia

“Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these?

Speaker: Patricia J. Martens PhDDirector: Manitoba Centre for Health Policy;CIHR/PHAC Applied Public Health Chair;Associate Professor, Department of Community Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Manitoba

ABSTRACT AUTHORS: Martens PJ, Fransoo R, The Need To Know Team, Burland E, Prior H, Burchill C, Romphf L.

Page 2: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia

What Works? A first look at evaluating Manitoba’s regional health programs and policies at the population level.

Authors of report: Patricia Martens, Randy Fransoo, The Need To Know Team, Elaine Burland, Heather Prior, Charles Burchill, Linda Romphf, Dan Chateau, Angela Bailly, Carole Ouelette. Plus a massive Working Group!!

Chapters 7, 10 and 11

Page 3: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia

CIHR’s The Need To Know Team •CIHR-funded, through the Community Alliances for Health Research (CAHR) program 2001-2007; CIHR KT Award (2007/08); CIHR/PHAC Applied Public Health Chair (2008-2013)

•MCHP, RHAs, Manitoba Health

Burntwood

Nor-Man

Interlake

Parkland

Assiniboine

North Eastman

Central

South Eastman

BrandonWinnipeg

Churchill

Burntwood

Nor-Man

Interlake

Parkland

Burntwood

Nor-Man

Interlake

Parkland

Assiniboine

North Eastman

Central

South Eastman

BrandonWinnipeg

Churchill

Page 4: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia

Do upstream systems approaches really work to reduce inequity?

Page 5: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia

Methods• The Population Health Research Data Repository,

housed at MCHP, contains anonymized administrative data for all Manitobans.

• Three health outcomes measured:– Breastfeeding initiation: % newborns breastfeeding on

hospital discharge (1988/89-2003/04)– Mammography tests: % women aged 50-69 receiving 1+

mammography within 2 years (1994/96-2002/04)– Cervical cancer screening: % women aged 18-69 receiving

1+ Pap test within 3 years (1986/89-2001/04)

• Regional age- and sex-adjusted rates and time trends: regression modelling (negative binomial, poisson or logistic regression)

Page 6: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia

Measure of ‘inequity’

Geographical “inequity” at earliest and latest time period: – subtracting highest and lowest aggregate

area rates = rate difference (RD) – aggregate areas:

• non-Winnipeg areas (Brandon, Rural South, Mid, North);

• three Winnipeg areas (most healthy, average, least healthy).

Page 7: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia

Burntwood

Nor-Man

Interlake

Parkland

Assiniboine

North Eastman

Central

South Eastman

BrandonWinnipeg

Churchill

Burntwood

Nor-Man

Interlake

Parkland

Burntwood

Nor-Man

Interlake

Parkland

Assiniboine

North Eastman

Central

South Eastman

BrandonWinnipeg

Churchill

“North” = Nor-Man, Burntwood, Churchill

“South” = Assiniboine, Central, South Eastman

“Mid” = Parkland, Interlake, North Eastman

Page 8: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia
Page 9: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia

Figure 7.5: Trends in Non-Winnipeg Breastfeeding Initiation Rates

Maternal age-adjusted percent of newborns breastfeeding at hospital discharge

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

1988/891989/901990/911991/921992/931993/941994/951995/961996/971997/981998/991999/002000/012001/022002/032003/04

Time period

SouthMidNorthBrandonManitoba

Source: Manitoba Centre for Health Policy, 2007

RD 13.9%

RD 19.8%

Page 10: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia

Figure 7.6: Trends in Winnipeg Breastfeeding Initiation Rates

Maternal age-adjusted percent of newborns breastfeeding at hospital discharge

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

1988/891989/901990/911991/921992/931993/941994/951995/961996/971997/981998/991999/002000/012001/022002/032003/04

Time Period

Wpg Most HealthyWpg Average HealthWpg Least HealthyWinnipegManitoba

source: Manitoba Centre for Health Policy, 2007

Canada Prenatal Nutrition Programs, Healthy Baby and Family First

RD 16.0%

RD 11.7%

Significant “jump” at program onset, p<.003

Page 11: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia

Figure 10.5: Trends in Non-Winnipeg Mammography Rates

Age-adjusted percentage of women age 50-69 receiving at least one mammogram in two years

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

1984/86 1986/88 1988/90 1990/92 1992/94 1994/96 1996/981998/20002000/02 2002/04Time period

SouthMidNorthBrandonManitoba

Source: Manitoba Centre for Health Policy, 2008

RD 47.0%

RD 9.1%

Mid-1990s: Beginning of notification and rural Mobile Screening Program

Page 12: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia

Figure 10.6: Trends in Winnipeg Mammography RatesAge-adjusted percentage of women age 50-69 receiving at least one mammogram in two years

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

1984/86 1986/88 1988/90 1990/92 1992/94 1994/96 1996/981998/20002000/02 2002/04Time Period

Wpg Most HealthyWpg Average HealthWpg Least HealthyWinnipegManitoba

Source: Manitoba Centre for Health Policy, 2008

RD 21.1%

RD 24.3%

Page 13: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia

Figure 11.5: Trends in Non-Winnipeg Cervical Cancer Screening Rates

Age-adjusted percent of women age 18-69 with one or more Pap smears in a three-year period, excluding those who have had a hysterectomy

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

1986/89 1989/92 1992/95 1995/98 1998/2001 2001/04Time period

SouthMidNorthBrandonManitoba

Source: Manitoba Centre for Health Policy, 2008

RD 18.2% RD 31.8%

Page 14: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia

Figure 11.6: Trends in Winnipeg Cervical Cancer Screening Rates

Age-adjusted percent of women age 18-69 with one or more Pap smears in a three-year period, excluding those who have had a hysterectomy

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

1986/89 1989/92 1992/95 1995/98 1998/2001 2001/04Time Period

Wpg Most HealthyWpg Average HealthWpg Least HealthyWinnipegManitoba

source: Manitoba Centre for Health Policy, 2008

RD 8.2%

RD 12.9%

Page 15: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia

Key Results

BREASTFEEDING RATES: Winnipeg’s breastfeeding rates showed decreased inequity, associated with national (CPNP) and provincial perinatal core-area initiatives.

MAMMOGRAPHY RATES: mammography gap increased slightly in Winnipeg, but decreased dramatically outside Winnipeg. Provincial notification and rural mobile screening began in mid-1990s.

PAP TEST RATES: Pap tests showed increased inequity over time, both within Winnipeg, and more so outside Winnipeg. There was no cervical cancer provincial screening program.

Page 16: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia

Inte

rnal

val

idit

y

Low

High

Cross-sectionalPre-experimentalAnecdote/case study

Time series with comparisonObservational (prospective, historical prospective)Case-controlTime series with qualitative layer

Randomized Controlled Trials RCTQuasi-experimental comparison group studies

Associated, not causal!

Page 17: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia

"Le mieux est l'ennemi du bien.", from Voltaire's Dictionnaire Philosophique

(1764)

"The best is the enemy of good.“

More commonly cited as: "The perfect is the enemy of the good."

Page 18: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia

John B. McKinlay, 1998

Page 19: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia

Time series! (plus “systems” approach)

Page 20: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia
Page 21: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia

Key Message

“Upstream systems approaches”– Greater health inequity reductions were

associated with federal or provincial programs to increase access.

“Making the right choice the easy choice”

Page 22: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia

ManitobaCentre forHealth Policy

MCHP

www.umanitoba.ca/medicine/units/mchp/

Page 23: “Mind the gap” Which Manitoba health outcomes show increased or decreased inequity over time, and what programs are associated with these? Speaker: Patricia

Important to read the whole report!