Hackett Julia, Glidewell Liz, West Robert, Carder Paul, Doran Tim, Foy Robbie
BMC Fam Pract. 2014 Oct 25;15:168. doi: 10.1186/s12875-014-0168-7.
A range of policy initiatives have addressed inequalities in healthcare and health outcomes. Local pay-for-performance schemes for primary care have been advocated as means of enhancing clinical ownership of the quality agenda and better targeting local need compared with national schemes such as the UK Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF). We investigated whether professionals' experience of a local scheme in one English National Health Service (NHS) former primary care trust (PCT) differed from that of the national QOF in relation to the goal of reducing inequalities.
We conducted retrospective semi-structured interviews with primary care professionals implementing the scheme and those involved in its development. We purposively sampled practices with varying levels of population socio-economic deprivation and achievement. Interviews explored perceptions of the scheme and indicators, likely mechanisms of influence on practice, perceived benefits and harms, and how future schemes could be improved. We used a framework approach to analysis.
Thirty-eight professionals from 16 general practices and six professionals involved in developing local indicators participated. Our findings cover four themes: ownership, credibility of the indicators, influences on behaviour, and exacerbated tensions. We found little evidence that the scheme engendered any distinctive sense of ownership or experiences different from the national scheme. Although the indicators and their evidence base were seldom actively questioned, doubts were expressed about their focus on health promotion given that eventual benefits relied upon patient action and availability of local resources. Whilst practices serving more affluent populations reported status and patient benefit as motivators for participating in the scheme, those serving more deprived populations highlighted financial reward. The scheme exacerbated tensions between patient and professional consultation agendas, general practitioners benefitting directly from incentives and nurses who did much of the work, and practices serving more and less affluent populations which faced different challenges in achieving targets.
The contentious nature of pay-for-performance was not necessarily reduced by local adaptation. Those developing future schemes should consider differential rewards and supportive resources for practices serving more deprived populations, and employing a wider range of levers to promote professional understanding and ownership of indicators.
一系列政策举措致力于解决医疗保健及健康结果方面的不平等问题。与英国质量与结果框架(QOF)等全国性计划相比,地方初级保健绩效薪酬计划被视为增强临床对质量议程的主导权以及更精准满足地方需求的手段。我们调查了在英格兰国民健康服务体系(NHS)的一个原初级保健信托机构(PCT)中,专业人员对地方计划的体验与全国性QOF在减少不平等目标方面是否存在差异。
我们对实施该计划的初级保健专业人员及其参与制定过程的人员进行了回顾性半结构化访谈。我们有目的地选取了不同人口社会经济剥夺程度和成就水平的医疗机构。访谈探讨了对该计划及指标的看法、对实践可能产生影响的机制、感知到的益处和危害,以及未来计划如何改进。我们采用框架分析法进行分析。
来自16家全科诊所的38名专业人员以及参与制定地方指标的6名专业人员参与了访谈。我们的研究结果涵盖四个主题:主导权、指标的可信度、对行为的影响以及加剧的紧张关系。我们几乎没有发现证据表明该计划产生了任何与全国性计划不同的独特主导感或体验。尽管指标及其证据基础很少受到积极质疑,但鉴于最终益处依赖于患者行动和地方资源的可获得性,有人对其侧重于健康促进表示怀疑。服务于较富裕人群的诊所将地位和患者受益视为参与该计划的动机,而服务于较贫困人群的诊所则强调经济奖励。该计划加剧了患者与专业人员咨询议程之间的紧张关系,全科医生直接从激励措施中受益,而承担大部分工作的护士则不然,且服务于较富裕和较贫困人群的诊所在实现目标方面面临不同挑战。
绩效薪酬的争议性并不一定会因地方调整而减少。未来制定计划的人员应考虑为服务于较贫困人群的诊所提供差异化奖励和支持资源,并采用更广泛的手段来促进专业人员对指标的理解和主导权。