Resource allocation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Resource allocation

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Resource allocation & equity in general practice. Professor ... Capitation fees. Item of service payments. Sessional payments. Staff, premises and IT budgets ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Resource allocation


1
Resource allocation equity in general practice
  • Professor Azeem Majeed
  • University College London

2
Outline of talk
  • Role of general practitioners in the NHS
  • Allocating resources to GPs
  • GMS PMS contracts
  • Proposed new GP contract
  • Gatekeeping medical practice variations
  • Monitoring equity in general practice

3
Role of GPs in the NHS
  • Independent contractors (self-employed)
  • Provide primary (first contact) care
  • Around 75 of all medical contacts
  • Act as gatekeepers to other NHS services
  • Prescriptions, investigations, outpatient
    referrals, hospital admissions
  • Government views gatekeeping as more important
    than do many GPs or patients

4
Allocating resources
  • Budgets for hospital community services, mental
    health, GP prescribing allocated to PCTs
  • Based on population measures
  • No standards for allocation to practices
  • Creates large variations in practice budgets, GP
    income and use of resources

5
General Medical Services 1
  • Traditional method of allocating budgets to
    practices
  • GPs are self-employed and do not receive a salary
  • Funded through a complex system of fees and
    allowances
  • Payments based on GP and not practice

6
General Medical Services 2
  • Practice allowances
  • Capitation fees
  • Item of service payments
  • Sessional payments
  • Staff, premises and IT budgets

7
Personal Medical Services
  • Optional replacement for GMS contract
  • Practice-based budget
  • Usually based on previous GMS payments
  • Locks in variations and inequities
  • Simplifies contractual arrangements
  • Allows for salaried GPs

8
New GP contract
  • Practice-based contract
  • Fairer resource allocation
  • National terms of service with local flexibility
  • Focus on quality outcomes
  • Career development opportunities
  • Three levels of services Essential, additional,
    enhanced

9
Carr-Hill Formula
  • Age-sex workload curve
  • Nursing residential homes
  • List turnover
  • Additional needs Standardised long-term illness
    and standardised mortality ratios
  • Unavoidable costs
  • Other factors practice size London

10
Quality framework
  • Aimed at improving primary care services
  • By year 3 of new contract, 1.3 of 1.9 billion
    new resources for primary care
  • Four areas clinical, organisational, patient
    experience, additional services
  • Based on points awarded for achieving targets
    (maximum 1,050 points)

11
Gatekeeping role of GPs
  • In the NHS, GPs often control access to other
    services
  • These include prescribing, investigations,
    specialist referrals, emergency admissions
  • Important to monitor variations in the use of
    these services at practice level

12
Why do variations occur?
  • Patient
  • Doctor
  • General practice
  • Local health care system
  • National health care system

13
Implications of variation
  • Patients may be denied access to appropriate care
  • Patients may be at risk of iatrogenesis
  • Doctors may not be practising evidence-based
    medicine
  • May be a marker of inefficient use of resources

14
Antibiotic prescribing rates in 211 general
practices in 1998
15
Annual outpatient referral rates per 1,000 in
males
16
US Health Plans
Patients Referred/Year
UK
17
Monitoring equity
  • Population estimates
  • Routine statistics births, deaths, census
  • Health service use prescribing, referrals,
    admissions etc.
  • Monitoring information from new contract

18
Problems with GP lists
  • Variations in population size due to deprivation
    and population mobility
  • Nationally, 3 difference between ONS and GP-list
    estimates of population
  • For regional health authorities, difference
    varies from 1 to 10
  • For health authorities, difference varies from
    -5 to 22

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21
Area versus practice data
  • Traditionally, ONS and NHS information systems
    have generated mainly area-based data
  • PCTs will be practice based but will also have an
    area commitment
  • Some agencies will be entirely area based, e.g.,
    social services

22
NHS Activity data
  • Elective admissions
  • Emergency admissions
  • Outpatient referrals
  • Accident Emergency Department attendances
  • General practitioners prescribing costs (PACT)
  • Cash-limited general medical services
  • Claims data
  • Community health services
  • Diagnostic investigations

23
Generating good activity data
  • Data collection must be complete accurate
  • Practice code must be completed correctly
  • Sharing data to produce complete data for
    adjacent PCTs
  • Experience suggests that high-level commitment
    needed

24
General practice data
  • Considerable data collection required for new
    contract
  • Identification of cases, use of correct READ
    codes, monitoring process of care
  • Accurate and complete data recording
  • Large variation currently in recording of
    computerised data

25
Strengths of primary care data
  • Population based
  • Most contacts with NHS take place in primary care
  • Information on morbidity, treatment, outcomes
    utilisation
  • Increasing number of practices now computerised

26
Weaknesses of primary care data
  • Often comes from volunteer practices hence may
    not be representative
  • Quality completeness of data recording varies
    widely
  • Lack of socio-economic ethnic data
  • Collected for different objectives
  • Can be difficult expensive to access

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32
Access to data
  • Government has suggested it may publish practice
    quality scores
  • Unclear what other data will be made publicly
    available
  • Data needs to be interpreted with socio-economic
    characteristics of the population being examined

33
Conclusions
  • Shift from routine NHS data to data from GP
    computer systems
  • Considerable improvements in data quality needed
  • More systematic use of both routine data and GP
    data
  • Interpret data with socio-economic information
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