Planning NHS care for people with multiple conditions

As life expectancy has increased in recent decades, so has the number of people with multiple conditions. The NHS must make realistic plans to provide appropriate care for this growing group. To illustrate the potential impact on the NHS, we calculated the average use and cost of primary and secondary care services according to the number of conditions a person has.

Hospital and primary care records don’t directly contain information on the cost of treatment. For secondary care (emergency department, outpatient and inpatient care), we used national tariff costs. Each occurrence of care was assigned to a health care resource group and the national tariff payment system provided a cost for each group. For primary care, as no tariff costs are available, we used estimated unit costs from the nearest available year. The cost of each primary care prescription was obtained by linking the therapy code to item-specific costs from the national drug tariff.

The costs we calculated are underestimates. First, the database we used did not include community care, specialist mental health care, or specialised commissioning. Second, it was not possible to get unit costs for around 15% of prescriptions, and GP administration costs were not included in our analysis. Despite the limitations of the dataset, however, the impact of the growing number of people with multiple conditions on the NHS is clear. Around 50% of hospital admissions, outpatient visits and primary care consultations were for people with 2+ conditions. Around 23% of hospital admissions, outpatient visits and primary care consultations and 26% of primary care prescriptions were for people with 4+ conditions (Figure 6).

This increased activity in the NHS translates into share of spending across primary and secondary care: over 55% of NHS costs (for hospital admissions and outpatient visits) and over 75% of the costs of primary care prescriptions were for people with 2+ conditions (Figure 7). This trend is likely to continue, with consequences for the resources needed to sustain the NHS. Hospitals have treated more and more patients with multiple conditions over the last decade. If this trend continues, total hospital activity will increase by 14% and costs by £4bn over the next 5 years.

Figure 6: Percentage of total health care use by number of conditions

Figure 7: Percentage of total health care costs by number of conditions

The same relationship between additional conditions and greater use of primary and secondary care is seen when we look at four specific clinical areas: cancer, cardiovascular disease, COPD, mental health conditions. In all four areas, the average cost per patient increased as the number of additional conditions increased (Table 1). It should be noted that our calculations do not necessarily include the cost of active treatment of cancer because our sample included all patients diagnosed in the previous 5 years. This is as we would expect: patients with more ill health use services more, which incurs greater costs. These higher costs do not fall equally across all parts of the NHS, and particularly affect spending on primary care prescribing.

Table 1: Mean health care costsa by number of additional conditions for patients with a clinical priority condition

Clinical priority condition

NHS costs per additional conditions

NHS costs relative to no additional conditions

0

1

2+

0

1

2+

Cancerb

n

732

936

2,407

732

936

2,407

Total costs

£4,700

£5,600

£7,200

1

1.2

1.5

Inpatientc

£2,700

£3,000

£3,600

1

1.1

1.3

Outpatient

£1,500

£1,800

£2,000

1

1.2

1.3

Primary care consultations

£300

£400

£700

1

1.3

2.3

Primary care prescriptions

£200

£300

£700

1

1.5

3.5

Cardiovascular disease

n

1,094

2,012

9,865

1094

2012

9,865

Total costs

£2,200

£3,000

£5,700

1

1.4

2.6

Inpatientc

£1,100

£1,500

£2,800

1

1.4

2.5

Outpatient

£500

£700

£1,200

1

1.4

2.4

Primary care consultations

£300

£400

£700

1

1.3

2.3

Primary care prescriptions

£200

£300

£700

1

1.5

3.5

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)

n

366

745

3,779

366

745

3,779

Total costs

£2,400

£3,000

£6,300

1

1.3

2.6

Inpatientc

£1,000

£1,200

£2,900

1

1.2

2.9

Outpatient

£400

£700

£1,200

1

1.8

3.0

Primary care consultations

£400

£500

£800

1

1.3

2.0

Primary care prescriptions

£300

£500

£1,000

1

1.7

3.3

Mental health condition

n

9,782

8,130

14,880

9,782

8,130

14,880

Total costs

£1,500

£2,600

£5,200

1

1.7

3.5

Inpatientc

£600

£1,000

£2,200

1

1.7

3.7

Outpatient

£300

£600

£1,100

1

2.0

3.7

Primary care consultations

£300

£500

£800

1

1.7

2.7

Primary care prescriptions

£100

£300

£800

1

3.0

8.0

a Costs are means based on 2-year follow-up from 1 April 2014 and rounded to the nearest £100. Costs are estimated from activity in primary and secondary care and include primary care consultations, prescriptions, and hospital care (inpatient and outpatient) but do not include community care, some specialist mental health care, or specialised commissioning.

b All patients diagnosed with cancer in the previous 5 years are included in this table and so these costs do not include the cost of active cancer treatment for all patients, but this does not differ according to number of additional conditions.

c The majority of patients have £0 inpatient costs as they were not admitted to hospital in the 2-year follow-up period.

As shown in Table 1, people with cancer, cardiovascular disease or COPD and 2+ additional conditions have primary care prescription costs that are over three times the level for those with no additional conditions. The prescription costs are eight times as high for people with a mental health condition and 2+ additional conditions, compared with those with a mental health condition alone. The close link between physical and mental health, and the need to improve access to physical health care for people with mental health problems, is well recognised, and our findings demonstrate the need to sustain pioneering efforts to integrate treatment for mental and physical health conditions.

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