Kirkwood Graham, Pollock Allyson M, Howie Colin, Wild Sarah
Centre for Primary Care and Public Health, Queen Mary, University of London, London E1 2AB, UK.
Centre for Primary Care and Public Health, Queen Mary, University of London, London E1 2AB, UK
J R Soc Med. 2014 Jun;107(6):237-245. doi: 10.1177/0141076814523950. Epub 2014 Feb 24.
Following the election of the Labour government in 1997, policies were developed in England to reduce waiting times for NHS treatment with commitments to reduce health inequalities. Similar policies were adopted in Scotland but with less emphasis on the use of the private sector to deliver NHS treatments than in England. This study uses routinely collected NHS Scotland data to analyse geographical and socioeconomic inequalities in elective hip arthroplasty treatment before and after the introduction of the waiting time initiatives in Scotland in 2003.
Ecological study design.
Scotland.
NHS-funded patients receiving elective hip arthroplasty delivered by the NHS and private hospitals between 1 April 1998 and 31 March 2008.
Directly standardised treatment rates and incidence rate ratios calculated using Poisson regression.
There was a 42% increase in NHS-funded hip arthroplasties carried out in Scotland from 4095 in 2002-2003 (1 April 2002-31 March 2003) to 5829 in 2007-2008. There is evidence of a statistically significant reduction in geographical inequality (likelihood ratio test p < 0.001) but no evidence of any statistically significant change in socioeconomic inequality (p = 0.108), comparing the 5 years after 1 April 2003 with the 5 years before 1 April 2003. The number of NHS-funded hip arthroplasties undertaken privately rose from 1.1% in 2002-2003 to 2.9% in 2007-2008, whereas the NHS Golden Jubilee National Hospital increased its share from 3.3% to 10.6% over the same period.
The reduction in geographical inequality, or 'postcode lottery', in hip arthroplasty treatment in Scotland may be due to increased NHS capacity, in particular the development of the NHS Golden Jubilee National Hospital in Clydebank, Greater Glasgow as a dedicated centre to reduce surgery waiting times.
1997年工党政府当选后,英格兰制定了相关政策以减少国民医疗服务体系(NHS)治疗的等待时间,并承诺减少健康不平等现象。苏格兰也采取了类似政策,但相较于英格兰,在利用私营部门提供NHS治疗方面的重视程度较低。本研究使用苏格兰NHS常规收集的数据,分析2003年苏格兰引入等待时间倡议前后,择期髋关节置换治疗中的地理和社会经济不平等情况。
生态研究设计。
苏格兰。
1998年4月1日至2008年3月31日期间,接受NHS和私立医院提供的择期髋关节置换手术的NHS资助患者。
使用泊松回归计算直接标准化治疗率和发病率比。
苏格兰NHS资助的髋关节置换手术数量从2002 - 2003年(2002年4月1日至2003年3月31日)的4095例增加到2007 - 2008年的5829例,增幅为42%。与2003年4月1日之前的5年相比,2003年4月1日之后的5年,有证据表明地理不平等在统计学上显著降低(似然比检验p < 0.001),但没有证据表明社会经济不平等有任何统计学上的显著变化(p = 0.108)。私立机构进行的NHS资助髋关节置换手术数量从2002 - 2003年的1.1%上升至2007 - 2008年的2.9%,而同期NHS金禧国立医院的份额从3.3%增至10.6%。
苏格兰髋关节置换治疗中地理不平等现象(即“邮编抽奖”)的减少,可能归因于NHS能力的提升,特别是位于大格拉斯哥克莱德班克的NHS金禧国立医院作为减少手术等待时间的专门中心的发展。