Literature DB >> 15377574

NHS Direct versus general practice based triage for same day appointments in primary care: cluster randomised controlled trial.

David A Richards1, Lesley Godfrey, Jane Tawfik, Mike Ryan, Joan Meakins, Evelyn Dutton, Jeremy Miles.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess the relative effects on consultation workload and costs of off-site triage by NHS Direct for patients requesting same day appointments compared with usual on-site nurse telephone triage in general practice.
DESIGN: Cluster randomised controlled trial.
SETTING: Three primary care sites in York, England. PARTICIPANTS: 4703 patients: 2452 with practice based triage, 2251 with NHS Direct triage. All consecutive patients making requests for same day appointments during study weeks were eligible for the trial. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Type of consultation after request for same day appointment (telephone, appointment, or visit); time taken for consultation; service use during the month after same day contact; costs of same day, follow up, and emergency care.
RESULTS: Patients in the NHS Direct group were less likely to have their call resolved by a nurse and were more likely to have an appointment with a general practitioner. Mean total time per patient in the NHS Direct group was 7.62 minutes longer than in the practice based group. Costs were greater in the NHS Direct group--2.88 pounds sterling (0.88 pounds sterling to 4.87 pounds sterling) per patient triaged--as a result of the difference between the groups in proportions of patients at each final point contact after triage.
CONCLUSIONS: External management of requests for same day appointments by nurse telephone triage through NHS Direct is possible but comes at a higher cost than practice nurse delivered triage in primary care. If NHS Direct could achieve the same proportions of consultation types as practice based triage, costs would be comparable.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15377574      PMCID: PMC520999          DOI: 10.1136/bmj.38226.605995.55

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMJ        ISSN: 0959-8138


  9 in total

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7.  Nurse triage for house call requests in a Tyneside general practice: patients' views and effect on doctor workload.

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8.  Safety and effectiveness of nurse telephone consultation in out of hours primary care: randomised controlled trial. The South Wiltshire Out of Hours Project (SWOOP) Group.

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Authors:  M Gallagher; T Huddart; B Henderson
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  9 in total
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5.  The effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of telephone triage of patients requesting same day consultations in general practice: study protocol for a cluster randomised controlled trial comparing nurse-led and GP-led management systems (ESTEEM).

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  6 in total

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