Title: PRIMARY CARE IN THE HEALTH CARE SYSTEM
1PRIMARY CARE IN THE HEALTH CARE SYSTEM
- R.A. Spasoff, MD, Epidemiology Community
Medicine - L. Muldoon, MD, Somerset West Community Health
Centre - 2006 February 27
2PBL Ms Sharon Smith
- A thirty-five year old woman has a febrile
illness with cough, malaise and pain in the chest
that is aggravated with each breath. She has
been drinking more heavily since her boyfriend
was killed in a drug dispute. She visits an
emergency department, having previously visited a
walk-in clinic.
3IMPORTANCE OFPRIMARY CARE
- Strong primary care is the basis for a strong
health care system - The best systems are the ones with strong primary
care, e.g., UK, Netherlands - Romanow report devoted a whole chapter to primary
care saw it as the basis of a transformed system
4HEALTH FOR ALL 2000(WHO, 1981)
- The main social target of governments and of WHO
should be the attainment by all the people of the
world by the year 2000 of a level of health which
would permit them to lead a socially and
economically productive life. - WHO determined that HFA2000 could best be
achieved through primary health care
5PRIMARY HEALTH CARE(WHO)
- essential health care based on practical,
scientifically sound and socially acceptable
methods and technology made universally
accessible to individuals and families in the
community through their full participation and at
a cost that the community and country can afford
to maintain at each stage of their development,
in the spirit of self-reliance and
self-determination
6Characteristics of General Practice/Family
Medicine (Draft Charter of GP/FM, WHO-EURO, 1998)
- General (unselected health problems)
- Continuous
- Comprehensive
- Coordinated
- Collaborative
- Family-oriented
- Community-oriented
7PRINCIPLES OF PRIMARY CARE (CFPC)
- The doctor-patient relationship is central to
what we do as family physicians - The practice of family medicine is
community-based - The family physician is a resource to a defined
population - The family physician must be a skilled, effective
clinician
8Other important attributes of primary care
- First contact
- Accessibility
- Continuity
- Case-management (responsibility for coordinating
all the care that a person needs)
9METHODS OF PAYING PHYSICIANS
- Fee-for service
- Capitation
- Salary/sessional
- Combinations (blended funding)
10Fee-for-service
- Unit of remuneration is the service
- Rewards hard work, good patient relations,
accessibility - Encourages high-volume practice, especially when
fees are inadequate - Rewards talking services less well than doing
services discourages prevention and a global
approach to patients problems
11Capitation
- Unit of remuneration is the patient, not the
number of services provided. Fixed payment per
patient per month. - Implies a list or roster of patients, which may
strengthen accountability - Encourages continuity of care
- Provides incentive to keep patient healthy,
therefore should encourage prevention - May encourage doctors to be unavailable
12Salary/Session
- Unit of remuneration is time (per hour, per
month), not number of patients or services - Allows efficient use of time
- May encourage low-volume practice, slacking off
- Normally associated with practice in some sort of
institutional setting, which provides
accountability
13SETTINGS FOR PRIMARY CARE IN CANADA
- Private solo practice
- Private group practice
- FHN (HSO)
- CHC / CLSC
- Also (and not recommended)
- Emergency department
- Walk-in clinic
- Specialist practice
14Walk-in Clinics
- Convenient for patients, flexible for physicians
- Little continuity of care
- Fee-for-service payment encourages high volume
practice - Skim off the easy (remunerative) patients,
leaving older and multi-problem patients to
family physicians and thereby making family
practice less financially viable
15Emergency Departments
- Accessible (with long waits) 24 hours/day
- Ready access to technology
- Staff not appropriately trained for primary care
(emphasis on episodic care) - Very limited social support services
- Poor continuity of care
- Expensive (or are they?)
16Specialists(paediatrics, gynaecology, etc)
- Some specialists provide a certain amount of
primary care - They tend to work in solo practice or
partnerships, without a broad range of support
services - Their training is not appropriate for primary
care (expertise in depth rather than breadth, no
emphasis on family or continuity)
17Solo Practice/Partnerships
- Historically the most common pattern
- For doctors maximum professional autonomy and
individual responsibility, but minimum
professional support - For patients doctor-patient relationship,
continuity (in office hours), limited services - Fee-for-service payment encourages high volume
practice, discourages prevention
18Group Practice
- For doctors colleague support, sharing of
expenses and call duty, reduced capital costs - For patients one-stop provision of medical care
(wider range of services) - Usually fee-for-service payment
- Similar to solo practice in terms of hospital
utilization, costs and quality of care
19Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs)
- USA only do not exist in Canada
- Prepayment plan (equivalent of capitation)
combined with a large group practice, sometimes
with own hospital - Community-sponsored ones reduced hospitalizations
and total costs of care - Commercial sponsorship (managed care) has given
a good approach a bad name
20Health Services Organizations (HSOs)
- Ontario group practices funded by capitation
- Defined patient registers
- No provision for community input
- No provision for other professionals
- There were about 50 have been replaced by Family
Health Networks (see below)
21 Community Health Centres (CHCs)
- Community-sponsored clinics with boards
- About 50 in Ontario, 6 in Ottawa-Carleton
- Wide range of health and social services
- Care mainly for disadvantaged populations
- Funded by Ministry of Health via global budget,
with salaried staff - Funding provides flexibility, e.g., use of nurse
practitioners
22 Centres locaux de services communataires (CLSCs)
- Cover the entire province of Quebec
- Provide a range of medical, public health and
social services (similar to the WHO concept of
primary health care) - Global budget with salaried staff
- Primary medical care role has not developed to
the extent originally envisaged
23STRENGTHS OF PRIMARY CARE IN CANADA
- Well-trained family physicians, although not
enough of them - Family physicians can usually obtain hospital
privileges (although they can no longer afford to
do hospital practice) - Few direct financial barriers to prevent patients
from seeking care
24WEAKNESSES OF PRIMARY CARE IN CANADA
- Patients are free to shop around
- Physicians can practise where they want, rather
than where they are needed - Family physicians are isolated from each other,
other health and social workers, public health - Fee-for-service system does not permit use of
other health workers, e.g, nurse practitioners - Combination of inadequate fees and inadequate
numbers leads to overwork
25PRIMARY CARE REFORM
- Need for reform widely recognized family doctors
leaving practice, few new graduates entering - Many proposals have been considered
26Choices for Change Restructuring Primary Health
Care in Canada
- Prepared for Canadian Health Services Research
Foundation, 3 provinces, Health Canada. Nov 2003 - Evaluated 4 models of care on Effectiveness,
Productivity, Accessibility/Equity, Continuity,
Quality and Responsiveness, using evidence and
(mostly) expert judgment
27Findings of Report
- CHC-like model best on effectiveness,
productivity, continuity and quality, if
integrated with rest of health care system - HSO-like model best on accessibility,
responsiveness
28Recommendations of Report
- CHC-like model preferred HSO-like model
acceptable as transitional form - Organizations to be paid by capitation, personnel
(including MDs) to be paid by session - Should be multidisciplinary
- Information systems crucial
29Three Newer Ontario Models
- Family Health Networks
- Family Health Groups
- Family Health Teams
30Family Health Networks(FHNs), 2001-
- Have replaced HSOs
- Networks of family doctors working from common
or own offices (virtual clinics) - Defined patient registers, for which doctors
accept responsibility for 24-7 availability - Capitation, plus incentives for prevention.
Access bonus if patients don't go elsewhere.
31FHNs (continued)
- Very limited provision for other professionals
- Extensive use of IT
- Was supposed to cover 80 of family doctors by
2004, but didnt come close - In early 2005, accounted for gt1800 family
physicians, caring for gt2.5 million Ontarians
32Family Health Groups (FHGs), 2004- (Conservatives)
- Introduced when FHNs slow to develop
- As for FHNs, patients have to enrol, and group is
on-call 24/7 - Payment is not by capitation. Some enhanced FFS
billing, a few premiums andbonuses - Attractive to many FFS doctors, partly due to
increased income
33Family Health Teams (FHTs), 2004- (Liberals)
- Much more multidisciplinary than FHNs
- Two models
- Professional e.g., Family Medicine Centre
- Community similar to CHCs
- Payment blended capitation with bonuses,
premiums and ability to bill up to 40,000 per
year for non-enrolled patients.
34Summing Up
- New models should encourage continuity,
multidisciplinarity, and prevention should
discourage duplicated services - Will they attract more graduates into family
practice? - See http//www.health.gov.on.ca for a very
little more info