Putting the findings into practice

Our study suggests that improving the continuity of care for patients may help reduce hospital admissions for ambulatory care sensitive conditions. There are a number of ways that continuity of care could be improved. Here we make specific recommendations for general practices, commissioners and policymakers.

General practices

Maintaining continuity of care for patients is recognised by GPs as an essential component of general practice. The Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) has developed a toolkit to support practices in this area, using existing data from the electronic record.

Whatever level of continuity of care a GP practice currently offers, improving continuity further may help reduce hospital admissions. The most gains are likely to be made by practices whose patients are currently experiencing low or lower continuity.

Although approaches will require careful evaluation, several ideas have been suggested for how practices could review and improve some of their internal processes to provide more continuity of care. These include the following:

  • Receptionists and practice booking systems are central to promoting continuity; prompts as part of the booking process could encourage appointments to be made with a patient’s usual GP.
  • Large practices could consider organising themselves into small teams to care for a subset of the patients registered at the practice, meaning that patients receive continuous care at team rather than individual level.
  • Practices and commissioners could work together to identify specific patients who are experiencing low continuity of care and then ensure appointments are offered with the usual GP as a default.
  • Patients could be encouraged to request their usual GP, and have the possible benefits explained through posters, leaflets and during consultations.

In order to track progress, GP practices could measure their continuity regularly using existing data, for example using the UPC metric (though other measures could also be used).

It is crucial to give GPs and whole practice teams – as well as patients – the skills and opportunities to identify where improvement is required and then implement and evaluate changes., In particular, GPs and practice teams may need support to analyse and use their own data to improve the quality of care. Making progress in quality improvement requires:

  • the ability to diagnose problems by mapping processes and systems, and using data to highlight variation
  • the ability to work as a team in the general practice to identify and test changes.

Solutions to improve continuity, developed and owned by the practices, allow practices to make changes only they can see are needed, as well as being key to improving the morale and confidence of practice teams.,

Commissioners

Commissioners could support GP practices who wish to improve and track progress against the continuity of care they offer to patients on an on-going basis. Changes to the structures of general practices in an area, such as increases in the size of a practice to allow more services to be offered, or changes to opening hours may also necessitate interventions to improve continuity. The RCGP toolkit can help with this. Commissioners could also support practices through analytic support and shared learning.

National policymakers

Any future national initiatives to promote continuity should have a well developed understanding of how and why the policy will impact continuity in a particular context. For example, our recent evaluation of the introduction of named accountable GPs for people aged 75 or over found that it had no impact on longitudinal continuity of care, at least as over the first nine months and as measured by the UPC index.

The recent focus of national policy relating to primary care has prioritised expanding access to general practice, particularly through the prime minister’s recent commitment to implement seven-day GP services by 2020. While access is an important aspect of quality, continuity of care must also be considered. Access and continuity are both likely to have a role to play in shifting demand away from secondary care., Policymakers should support GPs and commissioners to develop strategies that provide both prompt access to a GP and good continuity of care.

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