Factors Influencing Referral of Patients With Voice Disorders From Primary Care to Otolaryngology (original) (raw)
Objectives/Hypothesis: To evaluate the frequency, timing, and factors that influence referral of patients with laryngeal/ voice disorders to otolaryngology following initial evaluation by a primary care physician (PCP). Study Design: Retrospective analysis of a large, national administrative US claims database. Methods: Patients with a laryngeal disorder based on International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification codes from January 1, 2004 to December 31, 2008, seen by a PCP as an outpatient (with or without otolaryngol-ogy involvement), and continuously enrolled for 12 months were included. Patient age, gender, geographic region, last PCP laryngeal diagnosis, comorbid conditions, time from first PCP visit to first otolaryngology visit, number of PCP outpatient visits , and number of PCP laryngeal diagnoses were collected. Cox and generalized linear regressions were performed. Results: A total of 149,653 unique patients saw a PCP as an outpatient for a laryngeal/voice disorder, with 136,152 (90.9%) only seeing a PCP, 6,013 (4.0%) referred by a PCP to an otolaryngologist, and 3,820 (2.6%) self-referred to an otolar-yngologist. Acute laryngitis had a lower hazard ratio (HR) for otolaryngology referral than chronic laryngitis, nonspecific dys-phonia, and laryngeal cancer. Having multiple comorbid conditions was associated with a greater HR for otolaryngology referral than having no comorbidities. Patient age, gender, and geographic region also affected otolaryngology referral. The time to otolaryngology evaluation ranged from <1 month to >3 months. PCP-referred patients had less time to the otolaryn-gology evaluation than self-referred patients. Conclusions: Multiple factors affected otolaryngology referral for patients with laryngeal/voice disorders. Further education of PCPs regarding appropriate otolaryngology referral for laryngeal/voice disorders is needed.