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Dermot O'Reilly a Health and Social Care Research
Unit, Queen's University of Belfast, BT12 6BJ, b Department of General Practice,
Queen's University of Belfast, c Royal College of General Physicians Research Practice,
Mountsandel Surgery, Coleraine BT52 1JB
Correspondence to: Dr
O'Reilly d.oreilly{at}qub.ac.uk
Fundholding by general practitioners was introduced during
NHS reforms in 1989. Little is known about its impact on the quality of
patient care.1 One measure of this impact is the rate at which practices decide they do not wish to continue to provide general
medical services for patients and remove them from their lists
("removal at general practitioner's request"). In Northern Ireland
the rate of the removing patients from practitioners' lists increased
after the introduction of fundholding in 19932 which
suggests that there is a relation between fundholding and removing
patients from lists. We report an investigation to determine if
becoming a fundholding practice changed the rates of removing patients
from practice lists.
For the past 15 years the Central Services Agency has maintained a
register of all patients removed from lists at a general practitioner's request. The database does not contain patients who
have been removed for reasons such as leaving the country or moving
outside the practice area. However, records are retained if the patient
has died or emigrated. Demographic data were obtained for each patient
removed from a list during the study, and each record was coded
according to the fundholding status of the practitioner.
There were four waves of fundholding between 1987 and 1996; the
first began in April 1993 and each new wave followed in April of the
succeeding year. The data were divided into three phases for each
fundholding practice: fundholding, preparatory year (the financial year
prior to fundholding), and prepreparatory period (from January 1987 until the start of the preparatory year). The removal of an individual
patient or family unit was counted as one decision, and only first time
removals within the 10 year period were analysed. Rates for first
removal decisions per 10 000 person years were calculated for each
period as previously described.2 Rates for non-fundholding
practices were also examined using the commencement date of each wave
of fundholding to artificially divide the data into before and after
periods. In April 1996 there were 419 general practitioners in 114 practices serving 724 104 patients.
Results of the analysis are shown in the table.There was no increase in
the rate of removing patients from non-fundholding practices. Among
fundholding practices the rate of removing patients increased from
1.8/10 000 person years in the prepreparatory period to
2.2/10 000 person years during the fundholding period; this was an
increase of 21.4% (95% confidence interval 7.4% to 35.5%) Practices
that became fundholding practices in later years removed patients more
frequently and started removing patients at higher rates during the
preparatory year.
The rates of removing patients from general practitioners' lists
are influenced by characteristics of both the practice and population.2 In this analysis practices were compared with their earlier performance obviating these potentially confounding variables. The increases in the rates among fundholders are therefore intrinsically related to fundholding status. The different rates of
removal occurring between successive waves of fundholders and between
fundholders and non-fundholders could be attributed to differences in
socioeconomic and demographic characteristics of practice populations
arising from a selection bias in practices that became fundholding
practices. Other factors, such as the 1990 contract (which
substantively altered the terms of service of all general practitioners
in the United Kingdom), cannot explain the increase, as similar changes
were not found for the non-fundholding practices.
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Methods and results
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Methods and results
Comment
References
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Comment
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Methods and results
Comment
References
It is unclear why the rate of removing patients has increased but "list cleaning" (removing patients who have died or left the practice area from lists) can be discounted. The database used in this study is maintained separately from the patient registration data within the Central Services Agency and contains only removals made at the request of general practitioners. Trained staff undertake validation checks which include contacting practitioners and writing to patients to inform them of the category of removal. Removals because of death are processed differently, and follow up procedures would identify a misclassification.
The public perception is that financial factors motivate fundholders to remove patients from their lists.3 In the United States where healthcare systems provide financial incentives "adverse selection" is common; it has been suggested that the reforms in the NHS could stimulate similar effects.4 Increased rates of removing patient may, however, reflect the additional workload and pressures of fundholding5 rather than attempts at financial gain.
The decision to remove patients occurs comparatively infrequently and our results suggest that a fundholding practice with a list size of 5000 patients would be making one additional removal decision every five years. Our findings suggest that other areas of health care that experience large increases in workload, or where the potential for adverse selection exists, should be monitored.
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Acknowledgments |
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Contributors: KS and DO'R had the original idea for the study. DO'R, KS, AG, and SB designed the form for data collection. DO'R and BM were responsible for the analysis of the data. DO'R, KS, AG, SB, and BM wrote the paper. DO'R is the guarantor for the paper.
Funding: This study was assisted by a grant from the Royal College of General Practitioners.
Conflict of interest: None.
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References |
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(Accepted 17 July 1998)