Vertical integration of general practices with acute hospitals in England: rapid impact evaluation.

Manbinder Sidhu, Catherine L Saunders, Charlotte Davies, Gemma McKenna, Frances Wu, Ian Litchfield, Fifi Olumogba, Jon Sussex
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Abstract

Background: Vertical integration means merging organisations that operate at different stages along the patient pathway. We focus on acute hospitals running primary care medical practices. Evidence is scarce concerning the impact on use of health-care services and patient experience.

Objectives: To assess the impact of vertical integration on use of hospital services, service delivery and patient experience and whether patients with multiple long-term conditions are affected differently from others.

Design: Rapid, mixed methods evaluation with four work packages: (1) review of NHS trust annual reports and other sources to understand the scale of vertical integration across England; (2) development of the statistical analysis; (3) analysis of national survey data on patient experience, and national data on use of hospital services over the 2 years preceding and following vertical integration, comparing vertically integrated practices with a variety of control practices; and (4) focus groups and interviews with staff and patients across three case study sites to explore the impact of vertical integration on patient experience of care.

Results: At 31 March 2021, 26 NHS trusts were in vertically integrated organisations, running 85 general practices across 116 practice sites. The earliest vertical integration between trusts and general practices was in 2015; a mean of 3.3 practices run by each trust (range 1-12). On average, integrated practices have fewer patients, are slightly more likely to be in the most deprived decile of areas, are more likely to hold an alternative provider medical services contract and have worse Quality and Outcomes Framework scores compared with non-integrated practices. Vertical integration is associated with statistically significant, modest reductions in rates of accident and emergency department attendances: 2% reduction (incidence rate ratio 0.98, 95% confidence interval 0.96 to 0.99; p < 0.0001); outpatient attendances: 1% reduction (incidence rate ratio 0.99, 95% confidence interval 0.99 to 1.00; p = 0.0061), emergency inpatient admissions: 3% reduction (incidence rate ratio 0.97, 95% confidence interval 0.95 to 0.99; p = 0.0062) and emergency readmissions: 5% reduction (incidence rate ratio 0.95, 95% confidence interval 0.91 to 1.00; p = 0.039), with no impact on length of stay, overall inpatient admissions or inpatient admissions for ambulatory care sensitive conditions. The falls in accident and emergency department and outpatient attendance rates are temporary. Focus groups and interviews with staff (N = 22) and interviews with patients (N = 14) showed that with vertical integration, health service improvements are introduced following a period of cultural interchange. Patients with multiple long-term conditions continue to encounter 'navigation work' choosing and accessing health-care provision, with diminishing continuity of care.

Limitations: In the quantitative analysis, we could not replicate the counterfactual of what would have happened in those specific locations had practices not merged with trusts. There was imbalance across three case study sites with regard to staff and patients recruited for interview, and the latter were drawn from patient participation groups who may not be representative of local populations.

Conclusions: Vertical integration can lead to modest reductions in use of hospital services and has minor or no impact on patient experience of care. Our analysis does not reveal a case for widespread roll-out of the approach.

Future research: Further quantitative follow-up of the longer-term impact of vertical integration on hospital usage and more extensive interviewing of patients and their carers about patient experiences of navigating care.

Funding: This project was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme (BRACE Project no. 16/138/31) and will be published in full in Health and Social Care Delivery Research; Vol. 11, No. 17. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.

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全科医学与英格兰急性病医院的垂直整合:快速影响评估。
背景:垂直整合意味着合并在患者路径不同阶段运作的组织。我们专注于经营初级保健医疗实践的急性病医院。关于对使用保健服务和患者体验的影响的证据很少。目的:评估垂直整合对医院服务使用、服务提供和患者体验的影响,以及患有多种长期疾病的患者是否受到与其他患者不同的影响。设计:快速、混合的方法评估,包括四个工作包:(1)审查NHS信托年度报告和其他来源,以了解整个英格兰的垂直整合规模;(2) 发展统计分析;(3) 分析垂直整合前后两年的全国患者体验调查数据和全国医院服务使用数据,比较垂直整合实践与各种控制实践;以及(4)焦点小组和对三个案例研究地点的工作人员和患者的访谈,以探索垂直整合对患者护理体验的影响。结果:截至2021年3月31日,26家NHS信托机构位于垂直整合的组织中,在116个诊所经营85家全科诊所。信托和一般做法之间最早的垂直整合是在2015年;每个信托机构平均运行3.3次实践(范围1-12)。平均而言,与非综合实践相比,综合实践的患者更少,更可能在最贫困的十分之一地区,更有可能持有替代提供者医疗服务合同,质量和结果框架得分更差。垂直整合与事故和急诊就诊率的统计学显著、适度下降有关:下降2%(发病率比0.98,95%置信区间0.96至0.99;p p = 0.0061),急诊住院人数:减少3%(发病率比0.97,95%置信区间0.95至0.99;p = 0.0062)和急诊再次入院:减少5%(发病率比0.95,95%置信区间0.91至1.00;p = 0.039),对住院时间、总住院人数或门诊护理敏感情况的住院人数没有影响。急诊科和门诊就诊率的下降是暂时的。焦点小组和对工作人员的访谈(N = 22)和患者访谈(N = 14) 研究表明,通过垂直整合,在一段时间的文化交流之后,卫生服务得到了改善。患有多种长期疾病的患者继续面临选择和获得医疗服务的“导航工作”,护理的连续性越来越差。局限性:在定量分析中,我们无法复制如果实践没有与信托合并,在这些特定地点会发生什么的反事实。三个病例研究地点在招聘面试人员和患者方面存在不平衡,后者来自可能不代表当地人口的患者参与小组。结论:垂直整合可以适度减少医院服务的使用,对患者的护理体验影响很小或没有影响。我们的分析没有显示出广泛推广这种方法的理由。未来的研究:对垂直整合对医院使用的长期影响进行进一步的定量随访,并就患者的护理体验对患者及其护理人员进行更广泛的采访。资助:该项目由国家卫生与护理研究所(NIHR)卫生与社会护理提供研究计划资助(BRACE项目编号16/138/31),并将在《卫生与社会保健提供研究》上全文发表;第11卷第17期。有关更多项目信息,请访问NIHR期刊图书馆网站。
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