Cambridge Centre for Health Services Research, Primary Care Unit, Institute of Public Health, University of Cambridge, Forvie Site, Robinson Way, Cambridge CB2 0SR, UK.
BMC Fam Pract. 2013 Jun 25;14:89. doi: 10.1186/1471-2296-14-89.
Changing family practice (voluntary disenrollment) without changing address may indicate dissatisfaction with care. We investigate the potential to use voluntary disenrollment as a quality indicator for primary care.
Data from the English national GP Patient Survey (2,169,718 respondents), the number of voluntary disenrollments without change of address, data relating to practice characteristics (ethnicity, deprivation, gender of patients, practice size and practice density) and doctor characteristics were obtained for all family practices in England (n = 8450). Poisson regression analyses examined associations between rates of voluntary disenrollment, patient experience, and practice and doctor characteristics.
Mean and median rates of annual voluntary disenrollment were 11.2 and 7.3 per 1000 patients respectively. Strongest associations with high rates of disenrollment were low practice scores for doctor-patient communication and confidence and trust in the doctor (rate ratios 4.63 and 4.85). In a fully adjusted model, overall satisfaction encompassed other measures of patient experience (rate ratio 3.46). Patients were more likely to move from small practices (single-handed doctors had 2.75 times the disenrollment rate of practices with 6-9 doctors) and where there were other local practices. After allowing for these, substantial unexplained variation remained in practice rates of voluntary disenrollment.
Family practices with low levels of patient satisfaction, especially for doctor patient communication, are more likely to experience high rates of disenrollment. However substantial variation in disenrollment rates remains among practices with similar levels of patient satisfaction, limiting the utility of voluntary disenrollment as a performance indicator for primary care in England.
在不改变地址的情况下改变家庭医生(自愿退出)可能表明对医疗服务不满。我们研究了将自愿退出作为初级保健质量指标的可能性。
从英国国家全科医生患者调查(2169718 名受访者)中获取数据,包括所有家庭医生(n=8450)的自愿退出人数(无地址变更)、与实践特征(种族、贫困、患者性别、实践规模和实践密度)和医生特征相关的数据。采用泊松回归分析考察了自愿退出率、患者体验以及实践和医生特征之间的关系。
年平均自愿退出率为 11.2 例/1000 例,中位数为 7.3 例/1000 例。与高退出率相关性最强的是医患沟通和对医生的信心和信任评分较低(率比为 4.63 和 4.85)。在完全调整模型中,总体满意度包含了其他患者体验测量指标(率比为 3.46)。患者更有可能从规模较小的实践中(单人执业医生的退出率是有 6-9 名医生的实践的 2.75 倍)和有其他当地实践的地方迁移。在考虑到这些因素后,实践中自愿退出率仍然存在大量无法解释的差异。
患者满意度较低的家庭医生,尤其是在医患沟通方面,更有可能出现较高的退出率。然而,在具有相似患者满意度水平的实践中,自愿退出率存在很大差异,限制了自愿退出作为英国初级保健绩效指标的效用。