Thomas Beaney, Thomas Woodcock, Paul Aylin, Azeem Majeed, Jonathan Clarke
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Better continuity in primary and secondary care is linked to improved health outcomes, but it is unclear whether the sociodemographic determinants of continuity are the same in both settings and whether continuity measures in each setting are associated.
Aim: To examine the determinants of relational continuity in general practice and fragmented outpatient specialty care in people with clusters of multiple long-term conditions (LTCs) and the association between continuity in each setting.
Design and setting: A cohort of patients aged ≥18 years registered to general practices in England throughout 2019 and who had linked hospital outpatient records. Patients with ≥2 of 212 LTCs and with ≥3 general practice and ≥3 outpatient appointments were included.
Method: The Continuity of Care Index (COCI) was calculated separately for visits to the same a) GP and b) outpatient specialty, and associations calculated for sociodemographic factors and number of LTCs with COCI scores. The association was also assessed between indices in each setting using univariable and multivariable fractional logit regression.
Results: Of 1 135 903 patients, 56.3% (n = 639 489) were aged ≥60 years. Age was the strongest determinant of continuity in general practice, whereas number of LTCs was the strongest determinant in secondary care. Although statistically significant (P<0.001), the relationship between the COCI in general practice and outpatients was clinically insignificant in both univariable and multivariable models.
Conclusion: A lack of strong association between continuity of care in general practice and outpatient settings was found. This suggests that fragmented hospital care is not mitigated by increased continuity in general practice.
期刊介绍:
The British Journal of General Practice is an international journal publishing research, editorials, debate and analysis, and clinical guidance for family practitioners and primary care researchers worldwide.
BJGP began in 1953 as the ‘College of General Practitioners’ Research Newsletter’, with the ‘Journal of the College of General Practitioners’ first appearing in 1960. Following the change in status of the College, the ‘Journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners’ was launched in 1967. Three editors later, in 1990, the title was changed to the ‘British Journal of General Practice’. The journal is commonly referred to as the ''BJGP'', and is an editorially-independent publication of the Royal College of General Practitioners.