Capturing complexity in clinician case-mix: classification system development using GP and physician associate data

Author:

Halter Mary,Joly Louise,de Lusignan Simon,Grant Robert L,Gage Heather,Drennan Vari M

Abstract

BackgroundThere are limited case-mix classification systems for primary care settings which are applicable when considering the optimal clinical skill mix to provide services.AimTo develop a case-mix classification system (CMCS) and test its impact on analyses of patient outcomes by clinician type, using example data from physician associates’ (PAs) and GPs' consultations with same-day appointment patients.Design & settingSecondary analysis of controlled observational data from six general practices employing PAs and six matched practices not employing PAs in England.MethodRoutinely-collected patient consultation records (PA n = 932, GP n = 1154) were used to design the CMCS (combining problem codes, disease register data, and free text); to describe the case-mix; and to assess impact of statistical adjustment for the CMCS on comparison of outcomes of consultations with PAs and with GPs.ResultsA CMCS was developed by extending a system that only classified 18.6% (213/1147) of the presenting problems in this study's data. The CMCS differentiated the presenting patient’s level of need or complexity as: acute, chronic, minor problem or symptom, prevention, or process of care, applied hierarchically. Combination of patient and consultation-level measures resulted in a higher classification of acuity and complexity for 639 (30.6%) of patient cases in this sample than if using consultation level alone. The CMCS was a key adjustment in modelling the study’s main outcome measure, that is rate of repeat consultation.ConclusionThis CMCS assisted in classifying the differences in case-mix between professions, thereby allowing fairer assessment of the potential for role substitution and task shifting in primary care, but it requires further validation.

Publisher

Royal College of General Practitioners

Subject

Family Practice

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