| Literature DB >> 24152337 |
Madelon Kroneman1, Pascal Meeus, Dionne Sofia Kringos, Wim Groot, Jouke van der Zee.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The remuneration system of General Practitioners (GPs) has changed in several countries in the past decade. The aim of our study was: to establish the effect of these changes on the revenues and income of GPs in the first decade of the 21st century.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24152337 PMCID: PMC4015771 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-13-436
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Main types of remuneration of GPs in eight countries in 2010 with (italic) and changed (underlined) remuneration types compared to 2000
| | Yes | | | Incremental | |||
| | Yes | Yes | | | Incremental | ||
| Yes | Yes | Yes | | | | Incremental | |
| | Yes | | | Incremental | |||
| | | | | Comprehensive | |||
| | Comprehensive | ||||||
| Yes | | | | | | Incremental | |
| *** | Comprehensive |
If the text “Yes” is in italic, this type of remuneration is new for this country and if the text is underlined, this type of remuneration has changed in that particular country in 2010 compared to the year 2000.
* Capitation fee here includes also the fees for keeping a patient’s record.
**The integrated care fee is fairly new and in none of the countries it forms a significant share of the total revenue.
*** In the Netherlands 7-12% of the GPs are in salaried employment with independent GPs in the past decade. In the UK, also a growing number of GPs in working in salaried service, from 10% in 2004 to 19% in 2008 (including GPs working in salaried service and GPs who work flexible arrangements, excluding trainees (GP registrars) [34].
Figure 1GP-income development over time in pppUS$ and corrected for inflation (price level: 2000).
Figure 2Relative income development of GPs (2000 = 100; for Denmark: 2003 = 100).
Figure 3Average GP income of countries scoring strong or medium/weak on dimension of primary care strength*. * Countries scoring strong on the dimensions of primary care (included in calculating the red lines: Total strength: Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Netherlands, UK. Governance: Denmark, Netherlands, UK. Workforce development: Denmark, Finland, Netherlands, UK. Primary care access: Denmark, Netherlands, UK. Coordination of care: Denmark, Netherlands, Sweden, UK. Continuity of care: Denmark, Belgium, Germany. Comprehensiveness: Belgium, Finland, France, Sweden, UK. The countries that are not mentioned here scored medium or weak on the different dimensions and are included in calculating the blue lines.
Figure 4Relative income development compared to relative development in expenditure in basic medical and diagnostic care (OECD-data) per country, 100 = first year of data available in both time series. Exp. basic care: Expenditure in basic medical and diagnostic care. No data on expenditure in basic medical and diagnostic care available for France and UK.