Bowling A, Bond M
Department of Primary Care and Population Sciences, Royal Free and University College London Medical School, Royal Free Campus, Rowland Hill Street, London NW3 2PF.
Br J Gen Pract. 2001 Apr;51(465):264-9.
Encouraged by the increased purchasing power of general practitioners (GPs), specialist-run clinics in general practice and community health care settings (known as specialist outreach clinics) have increased rapidly across England. The activities of local commissioning schemes within primary care groups are likely to accelerate this trend.
To evaluate the costs, processes, and benefits of specialists' outreach clinics held in GPs' surgeries, compared with hospital outpatient clinics.
A case-referent (comparative) study comparing the characteristics of outreach clinics (cases) with matched outpatient control clinics.
Thirty-eight outreach clinics, compared with 38 matched outpatient clinics as controls, covering 14 hospital trust areas across England.
Self-administered questionnaires were given to patients in both clinic settings. These covered processes, satisfaction, personal costs, and health status, with postal follow-up at six months to assess health outcomes. Self-administered questionnaires were also given to the specialists and GPs whose clinics were included in the study (individual patient clinical sheet and an attitude questionnaire), practice managers, and trust accountants (process and costs questionnaire). Evaluation of the costs, processes, and benefits of specialist outreach clinics versus hospital outpatient clinics was carried out by comparing questionnaire responses.
In comparison with outpatients, outreach clinic patients spent less time on the waiting lists for appointments to see the specialist, they had shorter waiting times in clinics, fewer follow-up appointments, and were more likely to be completely discharged after the sampled attendance. Outreach patients were more satisfied than outpatients with the range of clinic process items asked about. Most doctors felt that the outreach clinic was 'worthwhile'. While patients' personal costs were lower in outreach than in outpatients clinics, NHS costs were more expensive per patient in outreach. The benefits of outreach clinics on patients' health status at six months' follow-up were relatively small.
Outreach clinics are a means of improving access to specialist services for patients, in addition to improving the efficiency and quality of health care. Most results were similar across specialties and areas. The benefits of the outreach service need to be weighed against their substantially higher NHS costs, in comparison with outpatients clinics. Outreach clinics are unlikely to be financially justifiable for NHS funding given that the impact on patients' health status was small.
受全科医生购买力增强的鼓舞,英格兰各地由专科医生运营的全科及社区医疗环境中的诊所(即专科外展诊所)数量迅速增加。初级保健团体内部地方委托计划的活动可能会加速这一趋势。
评估在全科医生诊疗室开展的专科外展诊所与医院门诊诊所相比的成本、流程及效益。
一项病例对照(比较性)研究,对比外展诊所(病例)与匹配的门诊对照诊所的特征。
38家外展诊所,与38家匹配的门诊诊所作为对照,覆盖英格兰14个医院信托区域。
在两种诊所环境中向患者发放自填式问卷。问卷涵盖流程、满意度、个人成本及健康状况,并在六个月后进行邮寄随访以评估健康结果。还向纳入研究的诊所的专科医生和全科医生(个体患者临床记录表及态度问卷)、诊所经理及信托会计师(流程及成本问卷)发放自填式问卷。通过比较问卷回复来评估专科外展诊所与医院门诊诊所的成本、流程及效益。
与门诊患者相比,外展诊所患者在等待预约看专科医生的名单上花费的时间更少,在诊所的等待时间更短,后续预约更少,且在抽样就诊后更有可能完全康复。外展诊所患者对所询问的一系列诊所流程项目的满意度高于门诊患者。大多数医生认为外展诊所“值得开展”。虽然外展诊所患者的个人成本低于门诊诊所,但国民保健制度(NHS)为每位外展诊所患者支出的费用更高。随访六个月时,外展诊所在患者健康状况方面的效益相对较小。
外展诊所是改善患者获得专科服务机会的一种方式,同时还能提高医疗保健的效率和质量。大多数结果在不同专科和地区相似。与门诊诊所相比,外展服务的效益需要与其高得多的国民保健制度成本相权衡。鉴于对外展诊所对患者健康状况的影响较小,国民保健制度为其提供资金在财务上不太可能是合理的。