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1 PRIMARY CARE IN THE HEALTH CARE SYSTEM R.A. Spasoff, MD, Epidemiology & Community Medicine L. Muldoon, MD, Somerset West Community Health Centre 2006.

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Presentation on theme: "1 PRIMARY CARE IN THE HEALTH CARE SYSTEM R.A. Spasoff, MD, Epidemiology & Community Medicine L. Muldoon, MD, Somerset West Community Health Centre 2006."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 PRIMARY CARE IN THE HEALTH CARE SYSTEM R.A. Spasoff, MD, Epidemiology & Community Medicine L. Muldoon, MD, Somerset West Community Health Centre 2006 February 27

2 2 PBL: Ms Sharon Smith A thirty-five year old woman has a febrile illness with cough, malaise and pain in the chest that is aggravated with each breath. She has been drinking more heavily since her boyfriend was killed in a drug dispute. She visits an emergency department, having previously visited a walk-in clinic.

3 3 IMPORTANCE OF PRIMARY CARE Strong primary care is the basis for a strong health care system The best systems are the ones with strong primary care, e.g., UK, Netherlands Romanow report devoted a whole chapter to primary care; saw it as the basis of a transformed system

4 4 HEALTH FOR ALL 2000 (WHO, 1981) “The main social target of governments and of WHO should be the attainment by all the people of the world by the year 2000 of a level of health which would permit them to lead a socially and economically productive life.” WHO determined that HFA2000 could best be achieved through primary health care

5 5 PRIMARY HEALTH CARE (WHO) “… essential health care based on practical, scientifically sound and socially acceptable methods and technology made universally accessible to individuals and families in the community through their full participation and at a cost that the community and country can afford to maintain at each stage of their development, in the spirit of self- reliance and self-determination”

6 6 Characteristics of General Practice/Family Medicine (Draft Charter of GP/FM, WHO-EURO, 1998) General (unselected health problems) Continuous Comprehensive Coordinated Collaborative Family-oriented Community-oriented

7 7 PRINCIPLES OF PRIMARY CARE (CFPC) The doctor-patient relationship is central to what we do as family physicians The practice of family medicine is community-based The family physician is a resource to a defined population The family physician must be a skilled, effective clinician

8 8 Other important attributes of primary care First contact Accessibility Continuity Case-management (responsibility for coordinating all the care that a person needs)

9 9 METHODS OF PAYING PHYSICIANS Fee-for service Capitation Salary/sessional Combinations (blended funding)

10 10 Fee-for-service Unit of remuneration is the service Rewards hard work, good patient relations, accessibility Encourages high-volume practice, especially when fees are inadequate Rewards “talking” services less well than “doing” services; discourages prevention and a global approach to patients’ problems

11 11 Capitation Unit of remuneration is the patient, not the number of services provided. Fixed payment per patient per month. Implies a list or roster of patients, which may strengthen accountability Encourages continuity of care Provides incentive to keep patient healthy, therefore should encourage prevention May encourage doctors to be unavailable

12 12 Salary/Session Unit of remuneration is time (per hour, per month), not number of patients or services Allows efficient use of time May encourage low-volume practice, slacking off Normally associated with practice in some sort of institutional setting, which provides accountability

13 13 SETTINGS FOR PRIMARY CARE IN CANADA Private solo practice Private group practice FHN (HSO) CHC / CLSC Also (and not recommended): –Emergency department –Walk-in clinic –Specialist practice

14 14 Walk-in Clinics Convenient for patients, flexible for physicians Little continuity of care Fee-for-service payment encourages high volume practice Skim off the “easy” (remunerative) patients, leaving older and multi-problem patients to family physicians and thereby making family practice less financially viable

15 15 Emergency Departments Accessible (with long waits) 24 hours/day Ready access to technology Staff not appropriately trained for primary care (emphasis on episodic care) Very limited social support services Poor continuity of care Expensive (or are they?)

16 16 Specialists (paediatrics, gynaecology, etc) Some specialists provide a certain amount of primary care They tend to work in solo practice or partnerships, without a broad range of support services Their training is not appropriate for primary care (expertise in depth rather than breadth, no emphasis on family or continuity)

17 17 Solo Practice/Partnerships Historically the most common pattern For doctors: maximum professional autonomy and individual responsibility, but minimum professional support For patients: doctor-patient relationship, continuity (in office hours), limited services Fee-for-service payment encourages high volume practice, discourages prevention

18 18 Group Practice For doctors: colleague support, sharing of expenses and call duty, reduced capital costs For patients: one-stop provision of medical care (wider range of services) Usually fee-for-service payment Similar to solo practice in terms of hospital utilization, costs and quality of care

19 19 Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs) USA only; do not exist in Canada Prepayment plan (equivalent of capitation) combined with a large group practice, sometimes with own hospital Community-sponsored ones reduced hospitalizations and total costs of care Commercial sponsorship (“managed care”) has given a good approach a bad name

20 20 Health Services Organizations (HSOs) Ontario group practices funded by capitation Defined patient registers No provision for community input No provision for other professionals There were about 50; have been replaced by Family Health Networks (see below)

21 21 Community Health Centres (CHCs) Community-sponsored clinics with boards About 50 in Ontario, 6 in Ottawa-Carleton Wide range of health and social services Care mainly for disadvantaged populations Funded by Ministry of Health via global budget, with salaried staff Funding provides flexibility, e.g., use of nurse practitioners

22 22 Centres locaux de services communataires (CLSCs) Cover the entire province of Quebec Provide a range of medical, public health and social services (similar to the WHO concept of primary health care) Global budget with salaried staff Primary medical care role has not developed to the extent originally envisaged

23 23 STRENGTHS OF PRIMARY CARE IN CANADA Well-trained family physicians, although not enough of them Family physicians can usually obtain hospital privileges (although they can no longer afford to do hospital practice) Few direct financial barriers to prevent patients from seeking care

24 24 WEAKNESSES OF PRIMARY CARE IN CANADA Patients are free to “shop around” Physicians can practise where they want, rather than where they are needed Family physicians are isolated from each other, other health and social workers, public health Fee-for-service system does not permit use of other health workers, e.g, nurse practitioners Combination of inadequate fees and inadequate numbers leads to overwork

25 25 PRIMARY CARE REFORM Need for reform widely recognized: family doctors leaving practice, few new graduates entering Many proposals have been considered

26 26 “Choices for Change: Restructuring Primary Health Care in Canada” Prepared for Canadian Health Services Research Foundation, 3 provinces, Health Canada. Nov 2003 Evaluated 4 models of care on Effectiveness, Productivity, Accessibility/Equity, Continuity, Quality and Responsiveness, using evidence and (mostly) expert judgment

27 27 Findings of Report CHC-like model best on effectiveness, productivity, continuity and quality, if integrated with rest of health care system HSO-like model best on accessibility, responsiveness

28 28 Recommendations of Report CHC-like model preferred; HSO-like model acceptable as transitional form Organizations to be paid by capitation, personnel (including MDs) to be paid by session Should be multidisciplinary Information systems crucial

29 29 Three Newer Ontario Models Family Health Networks Family Health Groups Family Health Teams

30 30 Family Health Networks (FHNs), 2001− Have replaced HSOs Networks of family doctors working from common or own offices (“virtual clinics”) Defined patient registers, for which doctors accept responsibility for 24-7 availability Capitation, plus incentives for prevention. Access bonus if patients don't go elsewhere.

31 31 FHNs (continued) Very limited provision for other professionals Extensive use of IT Was supposed to cover 80% of family doctors by 2004, but didn’t come close In early 2005, accounted for >1800 family physicians, caring for >2.5 million Ontarians

32 32 Family Health Groups (FHGs), 2004− (Conservatives) Introduced when FHNs slow to develop As for FHNs, patients have to enrol, and group is on-call 24/7 Payment is not by capitation. Some enhanced FFS billing, a few premiums and bonuses Attractive to many FFS doctors, partly due to increased income

33 33 Family Health Teams (FHTs), 2004− (Liberals) Much more multidisciplinary than FHNs Two models: –Professional: e.g., Family Medicine Centre –Community: similar to CHCs Payment blended: capitation with bonuses, premiums and ability to bill up to $40,000 per year for non-enrolled patients.

34 34 Summing Up New models should encourage continuity, multidisciplinarity, and prevention; should discourage duplicated services Will they attract more graduates into family practice? See http://www.health.gov.on.ca for [a very little] more infohttp://www.health.gov.on.ca


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