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Ciaran P O'Boyle Odstock
Centre for Burns, Plastic and Maxillofacial Surgery, Salisbury District
Hospital, Salisbury SP2 8BJ Correspondence to: C P O'Boyle ciaranoboyle{at}saintly.com
General practitioners' referrals for skin lesion excisions
constitute a large proportion of cases seen at plastic surgery clinics.
Escalating rates of skin cancer have increased the numbers of urgent
referrals due to suspicious looking skin lesions. As a result, patients
with clinically benign lesions spend long periods on waiting lists,
exceeding the waiting times agreed in negotiated contracts.
In March 1999, a total of 666 patients had been waiting over one
year for minor plastic surgery at Salisbury District Hospital. In
response, Salisbury Health Care NHS Trust and Wiltshire Health Authority proposed a new system of contract exclusions, whereby only
patients with lesions that suggested malignancy or that were disfiguring or potentially disfiguring would be seen. The health authority and the trust assumed that excluded patients would not be
seen or treated elsewhere. The consultant plastic surgeons reviewed the
referral letters for patients who were not given an operation and
returned the letters with explanatory notes.
This study aimed to assess the acceptability of the new system among
patients and general practitioners and to determine the outcome of
cases excluded under the new criteria.
Details of all referrals rejected under the new system were
collected for six months after its inception on 1 September 1999. In
each case, the site and description of the lesion were recorded. General practitioners and patients were contacted by telephone to
assess their satisfaction with the system and to determine whether
further referrals for excision had been made. The histological diagnosis was obtained for lesions excised after re-referral.
In six months, 112 referrals were rejected. Of these, 99 contactable patients (134 lesions) were followed up; 103 lesions (77%)
were in the head and neck. In many referral letters the clinical
description was non-specific but did not suggest malignancy or disfigurement.
Nineteen (19%) patients later had their lesions excised; 18 patients
had benign pathology, and one had a squamous cell carcinoma. The
patient with the carcinoma had been refused treatment solely on the
basis of a referral letter Most patients (77%) and general practitioners (63%) were dissatisfied
with the new contract exclusion criteria; 23% of patients and 36% of
general practitioners were satisfied with it. In all, 51% of general
practitioners re-referred their patient either to another hospital
(36%) or back to the original unit (15%).
There is low acceptance among general practitioners and patients
of recently imposed contract exclusions. Subsequent re-referrals transfer patients from one waiting list to another, wasting NHS resources without making waiting lists shorter. It is worrying that one
patient with a malignancy was refused NHS treatment under the new
system, and this error is consistent with the findings of previous
research suggesting that it is unreasonable to expect general
practitioners to have the diagnostic and therapeutic skills of
specialist clinicians.1 These findings raise questions
about the general practitioner's role in diagnosis and management in the context of restricted secondary services.
Rationing of health services is emotive, involving issues of
ethics, finance, and standards of care.
2 3
Although
possibly a legitimate factor in modern healthcare provision, rationing may be unacceptably restrictive to patients and clinicians. In Florida
in 1996, Medicare's decision to restrict funding of excision of
actinic keratoses resulted in litigation (although unsuccessful) by the
American Academy of Dermatology, the Florida Society of Dermatology,
and the Seniors Coalition.4
With rising political and financial pressures to cut NHS waiting lists,
patients with urgent problems are given priority. Those with apparently
benign conditions may wait for years to be seen in clinics, or they
could be excluded from waiting lists altogether.5 If
similar restrictions on service provision continue, this could
constitute implicit acknowledgement of an "acceptable level" of
missed malignancy. Although rationing of services may be necessary,
care must be exercised in its application.
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Methods and results
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Methods and results
Comment
References
on grounds that this was a cosmetic problem
and afterwards sought a private consultation and subsequent excision.
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Comment
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Methods and results
Comment
References
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Acknowledgments |
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Contributors: CO'B conducted the study and collated the data. The paper was written jointly by CO'B and RC. RC is the guarantor.
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Footnotes |
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Funding: Plastic surgery department, Salisbury Health Care NHS Trust.
Competing interests: None declared.
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References |
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| 1. | McWilliams LJ, Knox F, Wilkinson N, Oogarah P. Performance of skin biopsies by general practitioners. BMJ 1991; 303: 1177-1179. |
| 2. | Latham SR. The ethics of managed care: financial incentives to limit care. Clin Plast Surg 1999; 2: 115-121. |
| 3. |
Asch DA, Ubel PA.
Rationing by any other name.
N Engl J Med
1997;
336:
1668-1671 |
| 4. |
Charatan FB.
Skin lesion removal rationed in Florida.
BMJ
1996;
313:
1506 |
| 5. | Timmons TJ. Rationing of surgery in the National Health Service: the plastic surgery model. Ann R Coll Surg Engl 2000; 82(suppl): 332-333[Medline]. |
(Accepted 10 April 2001)
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