Objective: to analyze the influence of contextual indicators on the performance of
municipalities regarding potential access to primary health care in Brazil and to
discuss the contribution from nurses working on this access. Method: a multicenter descriptive study based on secondary data from External Evaluation
of the National Program for Access and Quality Improvement in Primary Care, with
the participation of 17,202 primary care teams. The chi-square test of proportions
was used to verify differences between the municipalities stratified based on size
of the coverage area, supply, coordination, and integration; when necessary, the
chi-square test with Yates correction or Fisher's exact test were employed. For
the population variable, the Kruskal-Wallis test was used. Results: the majority of participants were nurses (n=15.876; 92,3%). Statistically
significant differences were observed between the municipalities in terms of
territory (p=0.0000), availability (p=0.0000), coordination of care (p=0.0000),
integration (p=0.0000) and supply (p=0.0000), verifying that the municipalities
that make up area 6 tend to have better performance in these dimensions. Conclusion: areas 4,5 and 6 performed better in every analyzed dimension, and the nurse had a
leading role in the potential to access primary health care in Brazil.