Experience of Lifetime Health Maintenance Program: An Observational Study of a 30-Year Period of Outpatient Primary Care in a Tertiary Hospital

Article information

Korean J Fam Med. 2023;44(5):281-288
Publication date (electronic) : 2023 August 14
doi : https://doi.org/10.4082/kjfm.23.0023
1Department of Family Medicine, Uijeongbu Eulji Medical Center, Eulji University School of Medicine, Uijeongbu, Korea
2Department of Family Medicine, Asan Medical Center, University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea
*Corresponding Author: Young Sik Kim Tel: +82-2-3010-3811, Fax: +82-2-3010-3015, E-mail: youngkim@amc.seoul.kr
Received 2023 March 6; Revised 2023 April 30; Accepted 2023 May 1.

Abstract

Background

This study aimed to identify the clinical content of patients registered with the Lifetime Health Maintenance Program (LHMP) under the care of a single family physician who introduced and operated the program in Korea at a tertiary hospital for over 30 years.

Methods

We analyzed the electronic medical records of 745 patients who had registered for more than 3 times with the LHMP under the care of a single family physician between January 1, 2010 and December 31, 2019. We reviewed medical records from June 1989, when the hospital was established, to February 2022. The participants’ age at the time of LHMP enrollment, sex, initial consultation date, final consultation date, and consultation content were evaluated.

Results

Patients visited the LHMP for various reasons, including acute symptom management, chronic disease management, psychiatric consultation, counseling on health behaviors, health checkups, and vaccination. The top five diagnoses for acute symptom management were upper respiratory infection, abdominal pain, dizziness/vertigo, headache, and lower back pain, whereas those for chronic disease management were dyslipidemia, hypertension, osteoarthritis, osteoporosis/osteopenia, and diabetes. More than one in five patients received psychiatric consultation and counseling on health behaviors. As the duration of the program enrollment increased, the proportion of patients visiting the LHMP for acute symptoms, vaccinations, and health checkups also increased. Furthermore, the number of categories of consultation content increased for each patient.

Conclusion

The LHMP emphasized the need to systematize regular primary care physicians in Korea. Policy changes are necessary to strengthen primary care, and the LHMP serves as an intermediate step in organizing regular primary care physicians in Korea.

INTRODUCTION

Family medicine is a medical specialty, which provides comprehensive and continuing health care for the individual and their family members irrespective of age, gender, and disease [1,2]. The holistic nature of family medicine also emphasizes health promotion and disease prevention [1]. In South Korea (hereafter Korea), family medicine was introduced in 1979 and has been functioning as the center of primary care [2]. The number of board-certified family physicians increased to 6,935 (7.8% of all medical specialties) in 2020 [3]. In some countries such as Australia, Canada, Norway, Sweden, and England, primary care is the point of access to other specialists [4]. However, since visits to a primary care physician are not mandatory before consulting a specialist, a designated primary care physician for each patient does not exist systematically in Korea.

The lack of regular primary care physicians may cause several problems [5,6]. When patients visit a specialist based on their own judgement, the choice of specialty or specialist may be incorrect. Patients are more likely to undergo unnecessary examinations because doctors are unaware of the patients’ detailed medical history and previous test results. Consequently, overall medical expenses and social costs also increase [5,6].

The Lifetime Health Maintenance Program (LHMP) is a lifelong health management program that aims to prevent diseases and promote health throughout the lifetime of each individual [7]. It aims to detect diseases at an early asymptomatic period (secondary prevention), prevent disease development by identifying individualized health risk factors and behavior modification (primary prevention), and treat diseases appropriately to improve the quality of life (health promotion) [7]. The concept of LHMP is comparable to that of the clinical preventive health care in Canada and clinical preventive services in the United States [8,9]. In Korea, the LHMP was introduced in 1995 by the Korean Task Force on LHMP [7]. Since 1995, many primary care clinics and hospitals have adopted this program to provide lifelong health management to their patients. This method can overcome the systematic lack of regular primary care physicians in Korea because patients are registered with a single doctor in this program, which ensures continuity of care.

Although the LHMP has been implemented in many clinics and hospitals, very few studies have reported on the management of patients. Therefore, in this study, we present the clinical content of LHMP patients registered with a single family physician who introduced the LHMP in Korea and operated the program in a tertiary hospital for over 30 years.

METHODS

1. Study Participants

We analyzed the electronic medical records of 745 patients, who had registered for more than 3 times with the LHMP under the care of a single family physician (Y.S.K.), between January 1, 2010, and December 31, 2019. The registration period for the LHMP is 2 years. Therefore, patients who wanted to continue participating in the LHMP had to register every 2 years. The institutional review board (IRB) of Asan Medical Center (IRB approval no., 2021-1540) approved the study protocol and waived the requirement for consent to participate statement because this study was conducted through a retrospective review of medical records.

2. Data Collection and Measurement

We reviewed medical records from June 1989, when the hospital was established, to February 2022. Y.S.K., who managed the LHMP, and S.Y.K., a family physician, independently reviewed the medical records for accuracy. Medical records of the hospital were computerized in 2007. Prior to 2007, test results and medication prescriptions were preserved as electronic medical records, while clinical records written by doctors were preserved in optical files. Therefore, we were able to thoroughly investigate the medical records of patients over 30 years. We collected the participants’ age at the time of LHMP enrollment, sex, initial consultation date, and final consultation date. We evaluated whether each participant had visited the outpatient clinic more than once for acute symptoms and chronic diseases while registered with the LHMP. The acute symptoms were as follows: upper respiratory tract infection, abdominal pain, dizziness/vertigo, headache, lower back pain, chest pain, shoulder/elbow/wrist pain, knee pain, sinusitis/tonsillitis, Helicobacter pylori eradication, hip/pelvic pain, pruritus/urticaria, herpes simplex/zoster, ankle/foot/sole pain, urinary tract infection, neck pain, cellulitis/skin infection, and pneumonia. The chronic diseases included dyslipidemia, hypertension, osteoarthritis, osteoporosis/osteopenia, diabetes, benign prostate hyperplasia, tinea/onychomycosis, fatty liver, female menopause, hyperuricemia, alcoholic liver disease, anemia, cancer, chronic hepatitis B/C, testosterone deficiency syndrome, chronic kidney disease, hypothyroidism, ischemic heart disease/stroke, alopecia, hyperthyroidism, atrial fibrillation, cognitive impairment/dementia, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease/asthma. Furthermore, we evaluated whether each participant had received psychiatric consultation for anxiety, insomnia, and depression, and counseling on health behaviors such as obesity, smoking cessation, and alcohol consumption. Additionally, we evaluated the health checkup items and lists of vaccinations that the participants received. The specific tests of the health checkup were as follows: gastroscopy, colonoscopy, abdominal ultrasound, bone densitometry, chest radiography, low-dose chest computed tomography (CT), Papanicolaou (Pap) smear, mammography, breast ultrasound, serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level, serum alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) level, fecal occult blood test (FOBT), 24-hour blood pressure monitoring, and Patient Health Questionnaire–9. The vaccinations administered included influenza, zoster, pneumococcus, hepatitis A, hepatitis B, and tetanus. Consultation content was divided into the following six categories: acute symptoms, chronic diseases, psychiatric consultation, counseling on health behaviors, vaccinations, and health checkups. Among these categories, acute symptoms, chronic diseases, and psychiatric consultations were grouped as illness visits, while counseling on health behaviors, vaccinations, and health checkups were grouped as wellness visits.

3. Statistical Analysis

Descriptive statistics were used to present the number and proportion of participants for each consultation content. We conducted subgroup analysis according to sex. Chi-square tests were conducted to evaluate the association between age at the time of registration, sex, duration of LHMP enrollment, and each category of consultation content (acute symptoms, chronic diseases, psychiatric consultation, counseling on health behaviors, vaccinations, and health checkups). Furthermore, the number and proportion of participants according to the number of categories were presented. Chi-square test was performed to evaluate the association of age at the time of registration, sex, and duration of LHMP enrollment with the number of categories of consultation content. Statistical analyses were performed using IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows ver. 27.0 (IBM Corp., Armonk, NY, USA). Two-tailed P-values <0.05 were considered statistically significant.

RESULTS

1. General Characteristics of Patients in the Lifetime Health Maintenance Program

Table 1 shows the basic characteristics of the 745 participants enrolled in the LHMP. The mean age at the time of registration was 53.1±11.6 years. Among them, 54.5% were female. The mean duration of LHMP enrollment was 17.3±6.7 years; 13.8%, 46.6%, 35.6%, and 4.0% of the participants had registered for <10, 10–19, 20–29, and ≥30 years, respectively.

Demographic characteristics of the patients enrolled in the Lifetime Health Maintenance Program (N=745)

2. Content Analysis of Illness Visits

Table 2 shows the consultation content for illness visits. Among the acute symptoms, the top five diagnoses were upper respiratory infection, abdominal pain, dizziness/vertigo, headache, and lower back pain. More than 60% of the patients had visited the LHMP more than once for upper respiratory infections. Among the chronic diseases, the top five diagnoses for LHMP visits were dyslipidemia, hypertension, osteoarthritis, osteoporosis/osteopenia, and diabetes. In men, the top five diagnoses were dyslipidemia, hypertension, benign prostate hyperplasia, diabetes, and osteoarthritis, whereas in women the top five diagnoses were dyslipidemia, osteoporosis/osteopenia, hypertension, and osteoarthritis. More than 95% of the patients diagnosed with dyslipidemia, hypertension, tinea/onychomycosis, hypothyroidism, ischemic heart disease/stroke, alopecia, hyperthyroidism, and atrial fibrillation received pharmacotherapy (data not shown). Approximately 28%, 23%, and 20% of the patients received psychiatric consultation more than once for anxiety, insomnia, and depression, respectively. More women received psychiatric consultations than men.

Management of acute symptoms and chronic diseases in the Lifetime Health Maintenance Program (N=745)

3. Content Analysis of Wellness Visits

Table 3 shows the consultation content for wellness visits. The results of counseling on health behaviors showed that 32.5%, 20.8%, and 11.0% consulted more than once for obesity, alcohol consumption, and smoking cessation, respectively. More men received counseling on health behaviors than women. Pharmacotherapy was provided to ≥70% of the patients who received consultations for obesity and smoking cessation. However, only 21.9% of the patients received pharmacotherapy during alcohol counseling (data not shown). The top five tests for health checkups were chest radiography, gastroscopy, abdominal ultrasound, colonoscopy, and bone densitometry. In men, the top five investigations were serum PSA level, abdominal ultrasonography, gastroscopy, chest radiography, and colonoscopy, whereas in women, they were chest radiography, bone densitometry, gastroscopy, abdominal ultrasonography, and mammography. Influenza was the most common vaccination followed by pneumococcus and zoster.

Content of the wellness visits in the Lifetime Health Maintenance Program

4. Relationship between Patients’ Characteristics and Consultation Contents

Table 4 shows the general characteristics of patients according to the six categories of consultation content. More than 90% of the 745 patients visited the LHMP for management of acute symptoms, chronic diseases, and health checkups, whereas <50% visited the LHMP for psychiatric consultations and counseling on health behaviors. The proportion of patients who visited the LHMP for chronic diseases and psychiatric consultations increased with age at the time of registration. Conversely, the proportion of patients who visited the LHMP for counseling on health behaviors and vaccinations increased as the age at the time of registration decreased. The proportion of patients who visited the LHMP for acute symptoms, vaccinations, and health checkups increased as the duration of program enrollment increased. Table 5 shows the general characteristics of patients according to the number of categories of consultation content. Generally, the number of categories increased as the duration of program enrollment increased.

Characteristics of the patients according to the categories of consultation content (N=745)

Distribution according to the number of categories of consultation content (N=745)

DISCUSSION

In this observational study of outpatient primary care over a 30-year period, patients visited the LHMP for various reasons, including acute symptom management, chronic disease management, psychiatric consultation, counseling on health behaviors, health checkups, and vaccination. The top five diagnoses for acute symptom management were upper respiratory infection, abdominal pain, dizziness/vertigo, headache, and lower back pain, whereas those for chronic disease management were dyslipidemia, hypertension, osteoarthritis, osteoporosis/osteopenia, and diabetes. More than one in five patients received psychiatric consultation and counseling on health behaviors. Patients who were older at the time of registration visited more frequently for chronic disease management and psychiatric consultation; patients who were younger at the time of registration received counseling on health behaviors and vaccinations. Female patients had more psychiatric consultations, while their male counterparts received more counseling on health behaviors. As the duration of the program enrollment increased, the proportion of patients visiting the LHMP for acute symptoms, vaccinations, and health checkups also increased. Furthermore, the number of categories of consultation content increased for each patient.

In this study, the top five diagnoses for acute symptom management were upper respiratory infection, abdominal pain, dizziness/vertigo, headache, and lower back pain, whereas those for chronic disease management were dyslipidemia, hypertension, osteoarthritis, osteoporosis/osteopenia, and diabetes. According to a systematic review of primary care data from 12 countries, the top diagnoses in developed countries were hypertension, upper respiratory infection, back pain, arthritis, dermatitis, acute otitis media, diabetes, cough, and urinary tract infection, which are similar to the findings of this study [10]. The top diagnoses in developing countries were somewhat different as many of those were related to infections such as pneumonia, tuberculosis, parasites, bronchitis, and tonsillitis [10]. The prevalence of hypertension and diabetes in this study was 61.2% and 34.4%, respectively, which was similar to the national prevalence among those aged ≥65 years in 2020 (61.4% for hypertension and 30.1% for diabetes) [11]. However, the prevalence of dyslipidemia (69.7%) in this study was much higher than the national prevalence of hyperlipidemia (40.8%) and hypertriglyceridemia (10.2%) among those aged ≥65 years [11]. The difference in the prevalence of dyslipidemia between patients in this study and the general population is due to different definitions of dyslipidemia. Dyslipidemia in this study was defined based on the cardiovascular risk: lowdensity lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) ≥160 mg/dL for the low-risk group, LDL-C ≥130 mg/dL for the moderate-risk group, LDL-C ≥100 mg/dL for the high-risk group, and LDL-C ≥70 mg/dL for the very high-risk group, whereas hyperlipidemia in the national data was defined universally as total cholesterol ≥240 mg/dL or the intake of lipid lowering medications [11,12].

This study identified the reasons for patients’ visits to the LHMP. Patients visited for both illness and wellness, similar to the observations of previous studies [10,13-15]. Remarkably, approximately 45% of the participants received psychiatric consultations during the LHMP in this study. According to a Primary Care Network Survey in the United States, visits for mental disorders were approximately 5% [13]. Furthermore, in an international comparative study conducted in the Netherlands, Malta, and Serbia, the prevalence of depression in primary care was <4% [14]. The high proportion of psychiatric consultations in our study could be due to the following reasons: First, patients who had received psychiatric consultations in this study implied those who had ≥1 psychiatric consultations, and the mean enrollment duration was 17.3 years; thus, the proportions were not the same as the point prevalence. Additionally, the attending physician (Y.S.K.) had extensive experience and interest in psychiatric consultations. Furthermore, individuals with psychiatric problems more likely registered with the LHMP. Our study showed that psychiatric consultations can be effectively conducted by primary care physicians.

In our study, approximately 99% of the patients underwent a health checkup. An Irish study of general practitioner consultations found that 60% and 37% of patients underwent health checkups in a general medical service and private clinic, respectively [15]. The socioeconomic status of the patients in this study was higher than that of the general population because they could afford to visit a tertiary hospital. The high socioeconomic status of patients may have led to higher health checkup rates. Furthermore, individuals who required a health examination were probably registered with the LHMP and the attending physician might have recommended it during consultation. There are differences between health examinations in Korea and Western countries. Due to the high prevalence of gastric and liver cancer in Korea, the national health screening program provides biennial gastroscopy for those ≥40 years and serum AFP and liver ultrasound for those with hepatitis B virus infection, hepatitis C virus infection, or liver cirrhosis [16-18]. Furthermore, an annual FOBT is provided for those ≥50 years, and if, positive, a colonoscopy is included. Biennial low-dose chest CT for lung cancer screening is provided for those aged between 54 and 74 years with a history of ≥30-pack-years of cigarette smoking. A biennial mammography is provided for women ≥40 years; a biennial Pap smear is provided for those ≥20 years [18]. Primary care physicians recommend individualized health checkups to patients based on the national health screening program.

Our analysis identified sex-related differences in several categories of consultation content. First, female patients were more likely to receive psychiatric consultations than male patients. This may be due to a higher prevalence of mood or anxiety disorders among women than men [19]. It could also be due to sex-related differences in the utilization of mental health services. In previous studies, females with mental health problems were more likely to visit outpatient clinics than males [20,21]. It is important to create a healthcare environment in which individuals with mental health problems have easy access to physicians to prevent delayed diagnosis and undertreatment of psychiatric disorders. In this study, health promotion counseling was conducted more frequently among male patients. The prevalence of obesity, alcohol consumption, and smoking is higher among men than among women in Korea [22,23]. Due to the higher prevalence of poor lifestyle factors among men, male patients received more health promotion counseling than females. Previous studies have reported sex-based differences in the clinical content of primary care. In a Swedish study, cystitis, fatigue, hypothyroidism, depression, and acute sinusitis were significantly higher among women, and diabetes and multiple wounds were higher among men [24]. Furthermore, an Irish study reported a higher prevalence of central nervous system, gastrointestinal, urinary tract, and endocrine conditions among women and cancer and renal conditions among men [15]. In this study, the prevalence of cancer and diabetes was higher among men, and urinary tract infection, hypothyroidism, and sinusitis were higher among women, which is consistent with the findings of previous studies.

Furthermore, patients who were older at the time of registration were more likely to have chronic disease management and psychiatric consultations because age is the main risk factor for chronic diseases [25]. However, patients who were younger at the time of registration were more likely to receive counseling on health behaviors and vaccination. In Korea, the prevalence of alcohol consumption and smoking is higher among young adults compared to the general population [26]. Therefore, younger adults underwent more lifestyle interventions than older adults. The duration of LHMP enrollment was associated with the categories of consultation content, emphasizing the importance of regular primary care physicians. This proves that comprehensiveness, which is an advantage and a characteristic of primary care, is achieved through the continuity of care.

This is the first study to report the contents of LHMP in Korea. Although the LHMP was introduced in 1995, its real-world clinical data has not been reported. The average duration of program enrollment was approximately 17 years. Patients visit the LHMP for various health issues, including acute symptoms, chronic diseases, psychiatric issues, counseling on health behaviors, vaccinations, and health checkups. Furthermore, the number of categories of consultation content generally increased as the duration of program enrollment increased. In this context, our study demonstrates the diversity of the clinical content and continuity of care provided by the LHMP. We showed that the LHMP can be a good method to achieve the “4Cs (first contact, comprehensiveness, coordination, and continuity)” of primary care in places where regular primary care physicians do not exist [27]. Moreover, this study emphasizes the need for systematizing regular primary care physicians in Korea. We showed the various types of clinical content of the LHMP run by a single primary care physician and demonstrated the importance of continuity of care. The continuity of primary care physician is important because it is associated with lower medical expenditure, hospitalization rates, and mortality [28,29]. Therefore, it is important to modify the policies that hinder primary care in Korea.

One limitation of this study is the generalizability of the findings. As the study participants were patients who had registered with the LHMP under the care of a single family physician in a tertiary hospital, the findings do not represent the entire primary care environment in Korea. Multicenter studies, including small private and primary outpatient clinics in both secondary and tertiary hospitals, should be conducted to evaluate the overall clinical content of the LHMP. Furthermore, long-term outcomes, such as medical costs, hospitalization rates, and mortality of those registered with the LHMP, should be examined to evaluate the efficacy of the program.

Currently, a “regular, designated” primary care physician does not exist in Korea. The LHMP serves as an intermediate step in the systematization of regular primary care physicians. Because primary care is an essential part of the healthcare system, policy changes are necessary to strengthen it.

Notes

CONFLICT OF INTEREST

No potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported.

References

1. Wall EM. Continuity of care and family medicine: definition, determinants, and relationship to outcome. J Fam Pract 1981;13:655–64.
2. Shin HY. A survey of the working status of family medicine physicians in clinics and hospitals in Korea. BMC Fam Pract 2020;21:82.
3. Health Insurance Review and Assessment Service. Statistical analysis of the status of health and medical resources [Internet]. Wonju: Health Insurance Review and Assessment Service; 2021. [cited 2023 May 10]. Available from: http://www.suwonma.com/bbs/board.php?bo_table=hs0201&wr_id=1689.
4. Tu K, Sarkadi Kristiansson R, Gronsbell J, de Lusignan S, Flottorp S, Goh LH, et al. Changes in primary care visits arising from the COVID-19 pandemic: an international comparative study by the International Consortium of Primary Care Big Data Researchers (INTRePID). BMJ Open 2022;12e059130.
5. Kim AM, Cho S, Kim HJ, Jung H, Jo MW, Lee JY, et al. Primary care patients’ preference for hospitals over clinics in Korea. Int J Environ Res Public Health 2018;15:1119.
6. Choi YJ, Ko BS, Cho KH, Lee JH. Concept, values, current status and prospect of primary care in Korea. J Korean Med Assoc 2013;56:856–65.
7. Kim YS. Lifetime Health Maintenance Program for Koreans. J Korean Med Assoc 2003;46:1035–46.
8. Younger-Lewis C. The Canadian guide to clinical preventive health care. CMAJ 1995;153:181.
9. Houston TP, Elster AB, Davis RM, Deitchman SD. The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force guide to clinical preventive services, second edition. AMA Council on Scientific Affairs. Am J Prev Med 1998;14:374–6.
10. Finley CR, Chan DS, Garrison S, Korownyk C, Kolber MR, Campbell S, et al. What are the most common conditions in primary care? Systematic review. Can Fam Physician 2018;64:832–40.
11. Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency. Korea health statistics 2020: Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (KNHANES VIII-2) [Internet]. Cheongju: Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency; 2022. [cited 2023 May 10]. Available from: https://knhanes.kdca.go.kr/knhanes/sub04/sub04_04_01.do.
12. Rhee EJ, Kim HC, Kim JH, Lee EY, Kim BJ, Kim EM, et al. 2018 Guidelines for the management of dyslipidemia in Korea. J Lipid Atheroscler 2019;8:78–131.
13. Binns HJ, Lanier D, Pace WD, Galliher JM, Ganiats TG, Grey M, et al. Describing primary care encounters: the Primary Care Network Survey and the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey. Ann Fam Med 2007;5:39–47.
14. Soler JK, Okkes I, Oskam S, van Boven K, Zivotic P, Jevtic M, et al. An international comparative family medicine study of the Transition Project data from the Netherlands, Malta and Serbia: is family medicine an international discipline?: comparing incidence and prevalence rates of reasons for encounter and diagnostic titles of episodes of care across populations. Fam Pract 2012;29:283–98.
15. Murphy M, Brodie G, Byrne S, Bradley C. An observational study of public and private general practitioner consultations in the Republic of Ireland. Ir J Med Sci 2015;184:147–52.
16. Suh YS, Lee J, Woo H, Shin D, Kong SH, Lee HJ, et al. National cancer screening program for gastric cancer in Korea: nationwide treatment benefit and cost. Cancer 2020;126:1929–39.
17. Kim BH, Park JW. Epidemiology of liver cancer in South Korea. Clin Mol Hepatol 2018;24:1–9.
18. National Cancer Center. National Cancer Screening Program [Internet]. Goyang: National Cancer Center; [dated unknown] [cited 2023 May 10]. Available from: https://www.ncc.re.kr/main.ncc?uri=english/sub04_ControlPrograms03.
19. Riecher-Rossler A. Sex and gender differences in mental disorders. Lancet Psychiatry 2017;4:8–9.
20. Gagne S, Vasiliadis HM, Preville M. Gender differences in general and specialty outpatient mental health service use for depression. BMC Psychiatry 2014;14:135.
21. Hansen AH, Hoye A. Gender differences in the use of psychiatric outpatient specialist services in Tromso, Norway are dependent on age: a population-based cross-sectional survey. BMC Health Serv Res 2015;15:477.
22. Nam GE, Kim YH, Han K, Jung JH, Rhee EJ, Lee WY, et al. Obesity fact sheet in Korea, 2020: prevalence of obesity by obesity class from 2009 to 2018. J Obes Metab Syndr 2021;30:141–8.
23. Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Korea national health and nutrition examination survey fact sheet [Internet]. Cheongju: Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; 2020. [cited 2023 May 10]. Available from: https://knhanes.kdca.go.kr/knhanes/sub04/sub04_04_05.do.
24. Wandell P, Carlsson AC, Wettermark B, Lord G, Cars T, Ljunggren G. Most common diseases diagnosed in primary care in Stockholm, Sweden, in 2011. Fam Pract 2013;30:506–13.
25. Niccoli T, Partridge L. Ageing as a risk factor for disease. Curr Biol 2012;22:R741–52.
26. Kang SY, Park HS. Gender differences in comorbidities and attitudes regarding weight control among young adults with obesity in Korea. Obes Facts 2022;15:581–9.
27. Jimenez G, Matchar D, Koh GC, Tyagi S, van der Kleij RM, Chavannes NH, et al. Revisiting the four core functions (4Cs) of primary care: operational definitions and complexities. Prim Health Care Res Dev 2021;22e68.
28. Bazemore A, Petterson S, Peterson LE, Bruno R, Chung Y, Phillips RL Jr. Higher primary care physician continuity is associated with lower costs and hospitalizations. Ann Fam Med 2018;16:492–7.
29. Sandvik H, Hetlevik O, Blinkenberg J, Hunskaar S. Continuity in general practice as predictor of mortality, acute hospitalisation, and use of out-of-hours care: a registry-based observational study in Norway. Br J Gen Pract 2022;72:e84–90.

Article information Continued

Table 1.

Demographic characteristics of the patients enrolled in the Lifetime Health Maintenance Program (N=745)

Characteristic Value
Age at the time of registration (y)
 Mean age (y) 53.1±11.6
 <40 82 (11.0)
 40–59 424 (56.9)
 ≥60 239 (32.1)
Sex
 Men 339 (45.5)
 Women 406 (54.5)
Duration of program enrollment (y)
 Mean duration (y) 17.3±6.7
 <10 103 (13.8)
 10–19 347 (46.6)
 20–29 265 (35.6)
 ≥30 30 (4.0)

Values are presented as mean±standard deviation or number (%).

Table 2.

Management of acute symptoms and chronic diseases in the Lifetime Health Maintenance Program (N=745)

Variable Total Men Women
Acute symptoms
Upper respiratory infection 463 (62.1) 181 (53.4) 282 (69.5)
Abdominal pain 317 (42.6) 138 (40.7) 179 (44.1)
Dizziness/vertigo 286 (38.4) 117 (34.5) 169 (41.6)
Headache 231 (31.0) 76 (22.4) 155 (38.2)
Low back pain 194 (26.0) 76 (22.4) 118 (29.1)
Chest pain 183 (24.6) 96 (28.3) 87 (21.4)
Shoulder/elbow/wrist pain 129 (17.3) 54 (15.9) 75 (18.5)
Knee pain 118 (15.8) 36 (10.6) 82 (20.2)
Sinusitis/tonsillitis 109 (14.6) 41 (12.1) 68 (16.7)
Helicobacter pylori eradication 102 (13.7) 62 (18.3) 40 (9.9)
Hip/pelvic pain 77 (10.3) 20 (5.9) 57 (14.0)
Pruritus/urticaria 72 (9.7) 36 (10.6) 36 (8.9)
Herpes simplex/zoster 66 (8.9) 26 (7.7) 40 (9.9)
Ankle/foot/sole pain 61 (8.2) 26 (7.7) 35 (8.6)
Urinary tract infection 61 (8.2) 10 (2.9) 51 (12.6)
Neck pain 57 (7.7) 22 (6.5) 35 (8.6)
Cellulitis/skin infection 36 (4.8) 19 (5.6) 17 (4.2)
Pneumonia 19 (2.6) 9 (2.7) 10 (2.5)
Chronic diseases
Dyslipidemia 519 (69.7) 226 (66.7) 293 (72.2)
Hypertension 456 (61.2) 214 (63.1) 242 (59.6)
Osteoarthritis 272 (36.5) 99 (29.2) 173 (42.6)
Osteoporosis/osteopenia 260 (34.9) 16 (4.7) 244 (60.1)
Diabetes 256 (34.4) 133 (39.2) 123 (30.3)
Benign prostate hyperplasia 213 (28.6) 213 (62.5) 0
Tinea/onychomycosis 140 (18.8) 72 (21.2) 68 (16.7)
Fatty liver 135 (18.1) 74 (21.8) 61 (15.0)
Female menopause 123 (16.5) 0 123 (30.3)
Hyperuricemia 108 (14.5) 96 (28.3) 12 (3.0)
Alcoholic liver disease 73 (9.8) 71 (20.9) 2 (0.5)
Anemia 72 (9.7) 21 (6.2) 51 (12.6)
Cancer 53 (7.1) 29 (8.6) 24 (5.9)
Chronic hepatitis B/C 53 (7.1) 19 (5.6) 34 (8.4)
Testosterone deficiency syndrome 53 (7.1) 53 (15.6) 0
Chronic kidney disease 52 (7.0) 27 (8.0) 25 (6.2)
Hypothyroidism 42 (5.6) 9 (2.7) 33 (8.1)
Ischemic heart disease/stroke 31 (4.2) 25 (7.4) 6 (1.5)
Alopecia 28 (3.8) 24 (7.1) 4 (1.0)
Hyperthyroidism 23 (3.1) 10 (2.9) 13 (3.2)
Atrial fibrillation 22 (3.0) 12 (3.5) 10 (2.5)
Cognitive impairment/dementia 22 (3.0) 8 (2.4) 13 (3.4)
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease/asthma 18 (2.4) 6 (1.8) 12 (3.0)
Psychiatric consultation
Anxiety 208 (27.9) 67 (19.8) 141 (34.7)
Insomnia 168 (22.6) 55 (16.2) 113 (27.8)
Depression 152 (20.4) 48 (14.2) 104 (25.6)

Values are presented as number (%).

Table 3.

Content of the wellness visits in the Lifetime Health Maintenance Program

Variable Total Men Women
Counseling on health behaviors
Obesity 242 (32.5) 134 (39.5) 108 (26.6)
Alcohol counseling 155 (20.8) 147 (43.4) 8 (2.0)
Smoking cessation 82 (11.0) 77 (22.7) 5 (1.2)
Health check-up
Chest X-ray 643 (86.3) 291 (85.8) 352 (86.7)
Gastroscopy 635 (85.2) 298 (87.9) 337 (83.0)
Abdominal ultrasound 609 (81.7) 302 (89.1) 307 (75.6)
Colonoscopy 550 (73.8) 264 (77.9) 286 (70.4)
Bone densitometry 362 (48.6) 24 (7.1) 338 (83.3)
Fecal occult blood test 357 (47.9) 163 (48.1) 194 (47.8)
Prostate-specific antigen 315 (42.3) 315 (92.9) 0
Mammography 297 (39.9) 0 297 (73.2)
Patient Health Questionnaire–9 277 (37.2) 96 (28.3) 181 (44.6)
Papanicolaou smear 228 (30.6) 0 228 (56.2)
24-Hour blood pressure monitoring 158 (21.2) 77 (22.7) 81 (20.0)
Breast ultrasound 112 (15.0) 0 112 (27.6)
Low dose chest computed tomography 85 (11.4) 69 (20.4) 16 (3.9)
Alpha-fetoprotein 38 (5.1) 19 (5.6) 19 (4.7)
Vaccination
Influenza 451 (60.5) 199 (58.7) 252 (62.1)
Pneumococcus 215 (28.9) 91 (26.8) 124 (30.5)
Zoster 142 (19.1) 56 (16.5) 86 (21.2)
Hepatitis A & B 31 (4.2) 15 (4.4) 16 (3.9)
Tetanus 4 (0.5) 4 (1.2) 0

Values are presented as number (%).

Table 4.

Characteristics of the patients according to the categories of consultation content (N=745)

Characteristic Illness visits
Wellness visits
Acute symptoms Chronic diseases Psychiatric consultation Counseling on health behaviors Vaccination Health check-up
Total no. of patients (%) 681 (91.4) 733 (98.4) 332 (44.6) 330 (44.3) 504 (67.7) 736 (98.8)
Age at the time of registration (y)
 <40 73 (89.0) 74 (90.2) 33 (40.2) 39 (47.6) 65 (79.3) 81 (98.8)
 40–59 387 (91.3) 422 (99.5) 179 (42.2) 210 (49.5) 295 (69.6) 418 (98.6)
 ≥60 221 (92.5) 237 (99.2) 120 (50.2) 81 (33.9) 144 (60.3) 237 (99.2)
 P for trend 0.346 <0.001 0.044 0.001 0.001 0.629
Sex
 Men 302 (89.1) 334 (98.5) 112 (33.0) 216 (63.7) 220 (64.9) 337 (99.4)
 Women 379 (93.3) 399 (98.3) 220 (54.2) 114 (28.1) 284 (70.0) 399 (98.3)
 P-value 0.039 0.788 <0.001 <0.001 0.142 0.158
Duration of program enrollment (y)
 <10 83 (80.6) 99 (96.1) 45 (43.7) 44 (42.7) 47 (45.6) 99 (96.1)
 10–19 311 (89.6) 345 (99.4) 144 (41.5) 152 (43.8) 208 (59.9) 344 (99.1)
 20–29 257 (97.0) 260 (98.1) 126 (47.5) 124 (46.8) 223 (84.2) 263 (99.2)
 ≥30 30 (100.0) 29 (96.7) 17 (56.7) 10 (33.3) 26 (86.7) 30 (100.0)
 P for trend <0.001 0.824 0.116 0.870 <0.001 0.037

Values are presented as number (%), unless otherwise stated.

Table 5.

Distribution according to the number of categories of consultation content (N=745)

Characteristic No. of consultation content categories*
P-value
1 2 3 4 5 6
Total no. of patients (%) 1 (0.1) 14 (1.9) 94 (12.6) 266 (35.7) 279 (37.4) 91 (12.2)
Age at the time of registration (y)
 <40 0 2 (2.4) 8 (9.8) 34 (41.5) 27 (32.9) 11 (13.4) 0.294
 40–59 1 (0.2) 7 (1.7) 43 (10.1) 152 (35.8) 167 (39.4) 54 (12.7)
 ≥60 0 5 (2.1) 43 (18.0) 80 (33.5) 85 (35.6) 26 (10.9)
Sex
 Men 0 7 (2.1) 38 (11.2) 119 (35.1) 133 (39.2) 42 (12.4) 0.771
 Women 1 (0.2) 7 (1.7) 56 (13.8) 147 (36.2) 146 (36.0) 49 (12.1)
Duration of program enrollment (y)
 <10 1 (1.0) 5 (4.9) 25 (24.3) 35 (34.0) 31 (30.1) 6 (5.8) <0.001
 10–19 0 8 (2.3) 49 (14.1) 142 (40.9) 115 (33.1) 33 (9.5)
 20–29 0 0 19 (7.2) 80 (30.2) 120 (45.3) 46 (17.4)
 ≥30 0 1 (3.3) 1 (3.3) 9 (30.0) 13 (43.3) 6 (20.0)

Values are presented as number (%), unless otherwise stated.

*

Consultation content categories: acute symptom management, chronic disease management, psychiatric consultation, counseling on health behaviors, health check-up, and vaccination.