Do referral rates vary widely between practices and does supply of services affect demand? A study in Milton Keynes and the Oxford region.

A Noone, M Goldacre, A Coulter, V Seagroatt
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Abstract

Two commonly held beliefs about referral rates were investigated in this study: first that demand for services is determined by supply and secondly that there is wide variation between general practices in their referral rates. All referrals to specialist outpatient clinics were recorded during two 11-week periods by general practitioners in eight practices in the new town of Milton Keynes and in 17 practices elsewhere in the Oxford region. During the first period, only a limited outpatient service was available in the new town; for many specialist services, people had to be referred to hospitals outside the district. Referral rates from Milton Keynes were very similar to those from the rest of the region. By the second period the range of specialist facilities available locally had expanded considerably with the opening of the new district general hospital and during this period there was a statistically significant but rather small increase in referral rates from Milton Keynes. Variation in referral rates between general practices within each geographical group was greater than that between the two groups. Overall, there was about a three-fold variation between general practices in outpatient referral rates which is considerably less than that commonly thought to exist.

转诊率在不同的做法之间差别很大吗?服务的供应是否影响需求?米尔顿凯恩斯和牛津地区的研究。
本研究调查了关于转诊率的两种普遍看法:第一,对服务的需求是由供应决定的,第二,在转诊率的一般做法之间存在很大差异。在米尔顿凯恩斯新城的8个诊所和牛津地区其他地方的17个诊所,全科医生在两个11周的时间里记录了所有转介到专科门诊诊所的情况。在第一阶段,新镇只有有限的门诊服务;对于许多专科服务,人们不得不转诊到区外的医院。米尔顿凯恩斯的转诊率与该地区其他地区的转诊率非常相似。到第二个时期,随着新的地区综合医院的开业,当地可用的专业设施范围大大扩大,在此期间,米尔顿凯恩斯的转诊率在统计上有显著但相当小的增加。每个地理组内全科医生转诊率的差异大于两组之间的差异。总的来说,在门诊转诊率的一般做法之间大约有三倍的差异,这比通常认为的要小得多。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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