Walk-in Clinic Patient Characteristics and Utilization Patterns in Ontario, Canada: a Cross-sectional Study
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Background: Walk-in clinics are common in North America and are designed to provide acute episodic care without an appointment. We sought to describe a sample of walk-in clinic patients in Ontario, Canada, which is a setting with high levels of primary care attachment.
Methods: We performed a cross-sectional study using health administrative data from 2019. We compared the sociodemographic characteristics and health care utilization patterns of patients attending 1 of 72 walk-in clinics with those of the general Ontario population. We examined the subset of patients who were enrolled with a family physician and compared walk-in clinic visits to family physician visits.
Results: Our study found that 562 781 patients made 1 148 151 visits to the included walk-in clinics. Most (70%) patients who attended a walk-in clinic had an enrolling family physician. Walk-in clinic patients were younger (mean age 36 yr v. 41 yr, standardized mean difference [SMD] 0.24), yet had greater health care utilization (moderate and high use group 74% v. 65%, SMD 0.20) than the general Ontario population. Among enrolled Ontarians, walk-in patients had more comorbidities (moderate and high count 50% v. 45%, SMD 0.10), lived farther from their enrolling physician (median 8 km v. 6 km, SMD 0.21) and saw their enrolling physician less in the previous year (any visit 67% v. 80%, SMD 0.30). Walk-in encounters happened more often after hours (16% v. 9%, SMD 0.20) and on weekends (18% v. 5%, SMD 0.45). Walk-in clinics were more often within 3 km of patients' homes than enrolling physicians' offices (0 to < 3 km: 32% v. 22%, SMD 0.21).
Interpretation: Our findings suggest that proximity of walk-in clinics and after-hours access may be contributing to walk-in clinic use among patients enrolled with a family physician. These findings have implications for policy development to improve the integration of walk-in clinics and longitudinal primary care.
Fleury M, Rochette L, Cao Z, Grenier G, Massamba V, Lesage A BMC Prim Care. 2025; 26(1):7.
PMID: 39799284 PMC: 11724569. DOI: 10.1186/s12875-024-02674-0.
Salahub C, Austin P, Bai L, Berthelot S, Bhatia R, Bird C Ann Fam Med. 2024; 22(6):483-491.
PMID: 39586695 PMC: 11588379. DOI: 10.1370/afm.3181.
Characteristics of walk-in clinic physicians and patients in Ontario: Cross-sectional study.
Lapointe-Shaw L, Salahub C, Austin P, Bai L, Banwatt S, Berthelot S Can Fam Physician. 2024; 70(10):e156-e168.
PMID: 39406418 PMC: 11477262. DOI: 10.46747/cfp.7010e156.
Rahman B, Babe G, Griffith L, Price D, Lapointe-Shaw L, Costa A PLoS One. 2024; 19(8):e0307611.
PMID: 39172961 PMC: 11340953. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0307611.
Terpou B, Lapointe-Shaw L, Wang R, Martin D, Tadrous M, Bhatia S PLoS One. 2024; 19(5):e0303107.
PMID: 38748707 PMC: 11095764. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0303107.