| Literature DB >> 25240484 |
Jill Russell1, Deborah Swinglehurst, Trisha Greenhalgh.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In England the National Health Service (NHS) is not allowed to impose 'blanket bans' on treatments, but local commissioners produce lists of 'low value' procedures that they will normally not fund. Breast surgery is one example. However, evidence suggests that some breast surgery is clinically effective, with significant health gain. National guidelines indicate the circumstances under which breast surgery should be made available on the NHS, but there is widespread variation in their implementation.The purpose of this study was to explore the work practices of 'individual funding request' (IFR) panels, as they considered 'one-off' funding requests for breast surgery; examine how the notion of 'value' is dialogically constructed, and how decisions about who is deserving of NHS funding and who is not are accomplished in practice.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25240484 PMCID: PMC4177599 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-14-413
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Extract from IFR panel email discussion about Jack’s case of gynaecomastia (site A)
| From | To | Email text |
|---|---|---|
| Asst Director Public Health | Commissioning Manager | Please circulate my view, thanks. We would normally refuse to fund this as it’s a cosmetic procedure, however we need to be sure about the following points: |
| • significant adverse effect on activities of daily living | ||
| • significant disfigurement and I think should request further information on these, in particular the first one. I also think we should seek the [Assistant Director of Children’s Commissioning] views since this request is for a 14 year old child. | ||
| Chair of IFR Panel | Director of Commissioning cc Panel | Could you have a look at this, please. I’m not sure that it’s a contract exclusion and I wonder if it should be covered by PbR [Payment by Results]. |
| Breast reduction is normally something done to women with big breasts. The patient here is a young male with an unusual condition called gynaecomastia. This usually occurring in early adolescence and is a potential exception under the sector’s low priority treatments policy. | ||
| If this were a contract exclusion then I’d say we could not fund it at present on affordability grounds, but I wonder if it could be classified as something under PbR and would not be considered to be a contract exclusion? | ||
| Happy to discuss further. | ||
| Director of Commissioning | Chair of IFR Panel; cc Panel | I do not believe it is covered under PbR. I can find no reference to this under PbR. The consultant has also mentioned in his letter that it is cosmetic. We also have to bear in mind if [NHS hospital trust] carried out a procedure on a child they could apply a 78% uplift for the procedure from the adult tariff. |
| Chair of IFR Panel | Director of Commissioning; cc Panel | Thanks. If the consultant says that this is cosmetic and it’s not covered under PbR then we must decline to fund this on affordability grounds and because of the low priorities treatment policy (noting that gynaecomastia is a potential exceptional circumstance in this policy). |
| Assnt Dir. of Finance | Panel | I consider this cosmetic and therefore suggest that we do not fund this. |
| Director of Nursing | Panel | Although I appreciate that this is very problematic for the individual this particular request is as outlined by the consultant surgery for cosmetic reasons therefore I suggest that we do not fund this particular request. |
| Public health specialist | Panel | I agree not to fund this procedure for cosmetic reasons. |
Extract from transcript of audio-recording of IFR panel meeting about Jane’s case of breast reduction (site B)
| Speaker | Spoken words |
|---|---|
| Chair | Moving on to this case which is breast reduction, for back ache, we haven’t really… (inaudible) |
| CPH | How old is she? (pause whilst members look through papers including a report from a physiotherapist and a letter from the patient in support of her application) |
| ADPH | The physio report, doesn’t actually recommend, or what it says is that patient has responded partially [to |
| Chair | partially] |
| ADPH | the rehab programme and has been discharged. |
| Chair | mmm |
| ADPH | she needs a good bra |
| GP | I mean I think her letter actually says very much more [than |
| ADPH | yes] exactly |
| GP | anything, now it’s a question of whether, you know, she’s not had a relationship, she feels embarrassed, there’s obviously a psychological= |
| ADPH | hardly (inaudible) 38DD= |
| GP | =well if she is 4 foot 11 and quite a petite [frame |
| ADPH | what’s her] BMI? |
| GP | then that could well be large. And the fact that she has had three children will make them much more pendulous anyway so I could accept that she says they hang to her stomach and all the rest of it. |
| Chair: | I think the main thing here is that she hasn’t been referred, she doesn’t appear to have been referred to an orthopedic surgeon [or |
| GP | breast] reduction, well |
| Chair | to get a second clinical opinion. We’ve got the GP’s opinion but she hasn’t had any MRIs or anything like that. We don’t know what the other potential factors could be. |
| GP | I don’t know that an MRI would help to be honest. I think there are much more psychological issues with this lady than (.) the backache is to be honest neither here nor there. I am actually more concerned about the fact that she is withdrawing, she can’t pick up her child, she feels embarrassed to have an intimate relationship, umm |
| ADPH | She’s got a very young child, a 2 year old |
| GP | She’s got very young children, and I think [that’s |
| ADPH | yeah] |
| GP | that’s making her exceptional personally and I would say, I would approve then |
| Pharmacist | (inaudible) |
| GP | I mean the only thing I could check is what her BMI is= |
| ADPH | =I think that’s the only thing I wanted |
| GP | whether there is a, you know, if she was a BMI of 40 then maybe losing= |
| Pharmacist | weight |
| GP | weight would actually make them less heavy but she might still need a procedure to make [them |
| ADPH | I think] in principle we would agree but I mean I also want to know what her BMI is though |
GP = general practitioner. ADPH = Assistant Director of Public Health. CPH = Consultant in Public Health.
Transcribing conventions: = no pause between speakers; [ onset of overlapping speech; ] end of overlapping talk.