| Literature DB >> 20979612 |
Dionne S Kringos1, Wienke G W Boerma, Yann Bourgueil, Thomas Cartier, Toralf Hasvold, Allen Hutchinson, Margus Lember, Marek Oleszczyk, Danica Rotar Pavlic, Igor Svab, Paolo Tedeschi, Andrew Wilson, Adam Windak, Toni Dedeu, Stefan Wilm.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Scientific research has provided evidence on benefits of well developed primary care systems. The relevance of some of this research for the European situation is limited.There is currently a lack of up to date comprehensive and comparable information on variation in development of primary care, and a lack of knowledge of structures and strategies conducive to strengthening primary care in Europe. The EC funded project Primary Health Care Activity Monitor for Europe (PHAMEU) aims to fill this gap by developing a Primary Care Monitoring System (PC Monitor) for application in 31 European countries. This article describes the development of the indicators of the PC Monitor, which will make it possible to create an alternative model for holistic analyses of primary care.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20979612 PMCID: PMC2975652 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2296-11-81
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Result from the systematic literature review: identified primary care dimensions and features
| PC Dimension | Feature |
|---|---|
| Governance of the PC system | 1. Health (care) goals; 2. Policy on equity in access; 3. (De)centralization of PC management and service development; 4. Quality management infrastructure; 5. Appropriate technology in PC; 6. Patient advocacy; 7. Ownership of PC practices; 8. Integration of PC in the health care system. |
| Economic conditions of the PC system | 1. Health care expenditure; 2. PC expenditures; 3. Health care funding system; 4. Employment status of PC workforce; 5. Remuneration system of PC workforces; 6. Income of PC workforce. |
| PC workforce development | 1. Profile of PC workforce; 2. Recognition and responsibilities of PC disciplines; 3. Education and retention; 4 Professional associations; 5. Academic status of PC disciplines; 6. Future development of PC workforce. |
| Access to PC services | 1. Availability of PC services; 2. Geographic access of PC services; 3. Accommodation of accessibility (incl. physical access); 4. Affordability of PC services; 5. Acceptability of PC; 6. Utilisation of PC services; 7. Equality in access. |
| Continuity of care | 1. Longitudinal continuity of care; 2. Informational continuity of care; 3. Relational continuity of care; 4. Management continuity of care. |
| Coordination of care | 1. Gatekeeping system; 2. PC practice and team structure; 3. Skill-mix in PC; 4. Integration of PC-secondary care; 5. Integration of PC and public health. |
| Comprehensiveness of PC | 1. Medical equipment available; 2. First contact for common health problems; 3. Treatment and follow-up of diseases; 4. Medical technical procedures and preventive care; 5. Mother/child/reproductive health care; 6. Health promotion. |
| Quality of PC | 1. Prescribing behaviour of PC providers; 2. Quality of diagnosis and treatment in PC; 3. Quality of chronic disease management; 4. Quality of mental health care; 5. Quality of maternal and child health care; 6. Quality of health promotion; 7. Quality of preventive care; 8. Effectiveness; 9. Practice safety. |
| Efficiency of PC | 1. Allocative and productive efficiency; 2. Technical efficiency; 3. Efficiency in performance of PC workforce. |
| Equity in health | 1. Equity in health |
Figure 1Primary Care System Framework.
Figure 2Successive steps in the development of features and indicators for the PC Monitor.
Evaluation of suitability of long list indicators; selected results
| Dimension | ||
|---|---|---|
| Governance of the PC system | H | Is (near) universal financial coverage for PC services guaranteed by a publicly accountable body (government, or government-regulated insurer)? (3.42); Has a national primary care policy been formulated? (3.30); Is a national survey system or surveillance systems in place for monitoring the performance of the PC system (e.g. morbidity, mortality and process features)? (3.21) |
| L | Provide a summary of the content of national standards on PC service delivery that allow PC practices to develop differently in their services delivery (1.63); Tasks and professionals included in legislation on possibilities of task substitution or delegation in PC (2.00); PC-oriented patient organisations currently being active (name, purpose, and number of members) (2.01) | |
| Economic conditions of the PC system | H | Payment methods used for general practitioners?(Fee-for-service; Capitation payment; Salary; Mixed) (3.58); % of population covered for out-patient medical care by soc. health insurance (3.40); Method of health care financing for majority of (3.16) |
| L | Public expenditure on dental services as % of GDP (1.42); Private expenditure on dental services as % of GDP (1.50); Public expenditure on over-the-counter medicines as % of GDP (1.68) | |
| PC workforce development | H | Vocational training for general practice/family medicine in place? (3.55); Status of vocational training for general practice/family medicine (obligatory or voluntary) (3.57); Total nr. of active GPs as a ratio to total nr. of active specialists (3.39) |
| L | % of (re)trained PC professionals (other than general practitioners, physiotherapists, pharmacists, dentists or midwives) active in their profession of training (1.26); Total number of posts of PC professionals (other than the previously listed PC professions) currently vacant per 1000 inhabitants (1.42); % of active female PC professionals (other than the previously listed PC professions) (1.49) | |
| Access to PC services | H | Number of general practitioners per 100,000 population (3.74); Number of PC nurses per 100,000 population (3.56); Number of general practice consultations per capita per year (3.32) |
| L | Differences in dentist visits by income quintile (or education) (1.73); Number of consultations with PC professionals (other than general practitioners, physiotherapists, pharmacists, dentists, midwives) per capita per year (1.76); Differences in physiotherapy visits by income quintile (or education) (1.86) | |
| Continuity of care | H | Population/patients registered with a general practitioner (3.51); Average PC practice list size (3.45); Items normally recorded in patients' medical file for every encounter (reason of visit; problem and/or diagnosis; supporting data; treatment plan; medication details) (3.43) |
| L | Usual Provider Continuity Index: proportion of visits to one's own PC physician relative to the total nr. of visits to all physicians in the past year (1.91); Average length of PC provider-patient relationship (2.08); Average practice list turnover: Nr. of new patients in a period divided by the nr. of registered patients at the end of the period (2.16) | |
| Coordination of care | H | Patients having the possibility to directly access hospital based specialists (3.62); Patients having possibility to directly access emergency departments? (3.54); Patients having the possibility to directly access general practitioners? (3.49) |
| L | Predominant PC-Public Health Collaboration models in place (1.85); Specialist outreach models available for specific (chronic) conditions (2.18); If no direct access to speech therapists, can these be consulted if paid out of pocket (2.21) | |
| Comprehensiveness of PC | H | (Estimated) % of PC facilities usually carrying out immunizations for flu or tetanus (3.15); (Est.) % of PC providers usually providing first contact care to a man aged 28 with a first convulsion (3.09); (Est.) % of PC facilities usually involved in influenza vaccination for high-risk groups (3.08) |
| L | (Est.) % of PC providers that regularly pay attention to social services (1.81); (Est.) % of PC facilities involved in blood typing and antibody screening for prenatal patients (1.90); (Est.) % of PC facilities involved in school health care (1.92) | |
| Quality of PC | H | % of infants vaccinated against hepatitis B (2.99); % of infants vaccinated against invasive disease due to Haemophilius influenza type b (2.99); % of women aged 21-64 yrs who had at least 1 Pap test in the past 3 yrs (2.99) |
| L | Mortality for persons with severe psychiatric disorders per 100,000 (1.24); % of pregnant women having received a hepatitis B screening during their pregnancy (1.28); Potential life years lost of premature mortality from bronchitis (1.35) | |
| Efficiency of PC | H | Number of GP consultations per capita per year (3.34); Average consultation length (in minutes) of GPs (2.83); Number of new referrals from GPs to medical specialists per 1000 listed patients per year (2.82) |
| L | Nr. of GP consultations in the surgery as % of all GP-patient contacts (2.24); Nr. of home visits as % of all GP-patient contacts (2.63); Nr. of telephone consultations as % of all GP-patient contacts (2.72) | |
| Equity in health | H | Relative inequality (ratio between the rate of mortality in lowest and highest educational group) for avoidable mortality (2.34); Relative inequality for cardio-respiratory conditions (2.29); Relative inequality for mortality of infectious diseases (2.17) |
| L | Relative inequality for mortality of tuberculosis (1.73); same for pneumonia and influenza (1.73); same for asthma (1.92) |
* Judgement of evaluators: 0 = 'not useful', 1 = 'less important', 2 = 'important', 3 = 'very important', 4 = 'essential for PC comparison'.