Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
This paper investigates the effects of patient characteristics on frequency of referral at three group practices. Major findings are: for pediatricians, referral rate increases with patient age; among internists and general practitioners, variations in patient age, marital status, and payment source are consistently related to significant variations in referral rates. At the group with a large black clientele, blacks were referred significantly less than whites. A discussion of possible causes includes differences in medical conditions and utilization patterns as related to age and payment source, the economic burden of referral on fee-for-service patients, the social or psychological stresses on older unmarried patients, and variations by race in the patient-physician relationship. Methodological aspects of the study are presented in two technical appendices that deal with problems of estimation and tests of hypotheses used.
Penchansky et al. (Tue,) studied this question.