Thomas K, Nicholl J, Coleman P
Medical Care Research Unit, University of Sheffield.
Br J Gen Pract. 1995 Nov;45(400):581-6.
The government white paper, Promoting better health, suggested that primary health care services should be made more responsive to patient needs and that competition, brought about by the freer movement of patients between practices, could act as a mechanism for improving the quality of the services provided. Policy changes reflecting these aims were introduced with the 1990 contract for general practitioners.
A study was carried out to estimate the volume of patient movement between practices not attributable to a patient's change of address or to a major change in the practice they had left, and to investigate which practice characteristics patients moved towards and which they moved away from when changing general practitioner.
Data on 2617 patient movements during June 1991 were collected from five family health services authorities. These patient movements were analysed in relation to data on practice characteristics obtained from family health services authority records.
The estimated volume of movement of patients between practices was small (1.6% of the registered population per year). The majority of movements were between group practices; a quarter of the movements recorded were to single-handed general practitioners. However, the ratio of the number of movements from group practices to single-handed general practitioners compared with those from single-handed general practitioners to group practices was 1.37 (95% confidence interval 1.19 to 1.57). In choosing single-handed general practitioners these patients were willing to forgo access to a woman general practitioner, extended services and greater hours of general practitioner availability. Among the subset of movements between group practices, patients were more likely to gain access to a practice nurse, longer surgery hours and a woman general practitioner as a consequence of their move.
The scale of patient movement observed did not indicate any substantial mechanism by which the new policy of encouraging consumerist behaviour on the part of primary care users could effect desired changes in primary care practice. Among the patient movements observed, the evidence suggests that when choosing a practice potential patients were not deterred by the fact that a practice was single-handed. The public's perception of the factors contributing to a high quality of service may conflict with the official characterization of good practice and high quality services in primary health care.
政府白皮书《促进更健康》提出,初级医疗保健服务应更能满足患者需求,患者在不同医疗机构间更自由地流动所带来的竞争,可作为提高服务质量的一种机制。反映这些目标的政策变化随着1990年全科医生合同的出台而引入。
开展一项研究,以估计在非因患者住址变更或离开的医疗机构发生重大变化而导致的医疗机构间患者流动量,并调查患者在更换全科医生时会转向哪些医疗机构特征,以及会远离哪些特征。
从五个家庭健康服务机构收集了1991年6月期间2617例患者流动的数据。这些患者流动情况与从家庭健康服务机构记录中获取的医疗机构特征数据相关联进行分析。
估计医疗机构间患者流动量较小(每年占注册人口的1.6%)。大多数流动发生在团体执业机构之间;记录的流动中有四分之一是流向个体全科医生。然而,从团体执业机构流向个体全科医生的流动数量与从个体全科医生流向团体执业机构的流动数量之比为1.37(95%置信区间为1.19至1.57)。这些患者在选择个体全科医生时,愿意放弃女性全科医生、扩展服务以及更长时间的全科医生服务。在团体执业机构之间的流动子集中,患者流动后更有可能获得执业护士、更长的诊疗时间以及女性全科医生服务。
观察到的患者流动规模并未表明鼓励初级医疗保健使用者采取消费主义行为的新政策能在初级医疗保健实践中实现预期变化的任何实质性机制。在观察到的患者流动中,证据表明潜在患者在选择医疗机构时,不会因该机构是个体执业而受到阻碍。公众对有助于提供高质量服务的因素的认知可能与官方对初级医疗保健中良好实践和高质量服务的描述相冲突。