RELATION BETWEEN GENERAL PRACTICES OUTPATIENT REFERRAL RATES AND RATES OF ELECTIVE ADMISSION TO HOSPITAL

被引:40
作者
COULTER, A [1 ]
SEAGROATT, V [1 ]
MCPHERSON, K [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV OXFORD, RADCLIFFE INFIRM, DEPT PUBL HLTH & PRIMARY CARE, OXFORD OX2 6HE, ENGLAND
来源
BMJ-BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL | 1990年 / 301卷 / 6746期
关键词
D O I
10.1136/bmj.301.6746.273
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Objective. To examine the variation in rates of admission to hospital among general practices, to determine the relation between referral rates and admission rates, and to assess the extent to which variations in outpatient referral rates might account for the different patterns of admission. Design. A comparison of outpatient referral rates standardised for age and sex and rates of elective admission to hospital for six specialties individually and for all specialties combined. Setting. 19 General practices in three districts in Oxford Regional Health Authority with a combined practice population of 118610. Main outcome measures. Estimated proportion of outpatient referrals resulting in admission to hospital, extent of variation in referral rates and admission rates among practices, and association between admissions and outpatient referrals. Results. Patients referred to surgical specialties were more likely than those referred to medical specialties to be admitted after an outpatient referral. Overall, the estimated proportion of patients admitted after an outpatient referral was 42%. There were significant differences among the practices in referral rates and admission rates for most of the major specialties. The extent of systematic variance in admission rates (0.048) was similar to that in referral rates (0.037). Referral and admission rates were significantly associated for general surgery; ear, nose, and throat surgery; trauma and othopaedics; and all specialties combined. For most specialties the practices with higher referral rates also had higher admission rates, casting doubt on the view that these practices were referring more patients unnecessarily. Conclusion. Rates of elective admission to hospital vary systematically among general practices. Variations in outpatient referral rates are an important determinant of variations in admission rates.
引用
收藏
页码:273 / 276
页数:4
相关论文
共 17 条
[1]   PSEUDODOXIA PEDIATRICA [J].
BAKWIN, H .
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 1945, 232 (24) :691-697
[2]   GENERAL-PRACTITIONERS REFERRALS TO SPECIALISTS OUTPATIENT CLINICS .2. LOCATIONS OF SPECIALIST OUTPATIENT CLINICS TO WHICH GENERAL-PRACTITIONERS REFER PATIENTS [J].
COULTER, A ;
NOONE, A ;
GOLDACRE, M .
BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 1989, 299 (6694) :306-308
[3]   GENERAL-PRACTITIONERS REFERRALS TO SPECIALIST OUTPATIENT CLINICS .1. WHY GENERAL-PRACTITIONERS REFER PATIENTS TO SPECIALIST OUTPATIENT CLINICS [J].
COULTER, A ;
NOONE, A ;
GOLDACRE, M .
BMJ-BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 1989, 299 (6694) :304-306
[4]  
Crombie D L, 1988, Health Trends, V20, P53
[5]  
Eddy D M, 1984, Health Aff (Millwood), V3, P74, DOI 10.1377/hlthaff.3.2.74
[6]   TRENDS IN EPISODE BASED AND PERSON BASED RATES OF ADMISSION TO HOSPITAL IN THE OXFORD RECORD LINKAGE STUDY AREA [J].
GOLDACRE, MJ ;
SIMMONS, H ;
HENDERSON, J ;
GILL, LE .
BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 1988, 296 (6621) :583-585
[7]  
KNOTTNERUS JA, 1990, BRIT J GEN PRACT, V40, P178
[8]   SMALL-AREA VARIATIONS IN THE USE OF COMMON SURGICAL-PROCEDURES - AN INTERNATIONAL COMPARISON OF NEW-ENGLAND, ENGLAND, AND NORWAY [J].
MCPHERSON, K ;
WENNBERG, JE ;
HOVIND, OB ;
CLIFFORD, P .
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 1982, 307 (21) :1310-1314
[9]   REGIONAL VARIATIONS IN THE USE OF COMMON SURGICAL-PROCEDURES - WITHIN AND BETWEEN ENGLAND AND WALES, CANADA AND THE UNITED-STATES-OF-AMERICA [J].
MCPHERSON, K ;
STRONG, PM ;
EPSTEIN, A ;
JONES, L .
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE PART A-MEDICAL SOCIOLOGY, 1981, 15 (03) :273-288
[10]  
MCPHERSON K, 1988, HLTH CARE VARIATIONS