Abstract

Abstract Background Relational continuity in primary and secondary care is linked to better health outcomes for patients, but it is unclear whether metrics of continuity in each setting are associated. Our study examined the association between relational continuity in general practice (GP) and continuity of hospital outpatient specialties in people with clusters of multimorbidity. Methods We used GP records from the Clinical Practice Research Datalink, linked to Hospital Episode Statistics outpatient records. Included were patients ≥18 years, with two or more of 212 Long-Term Conditions (LTCs), registered throughout 2019 and with at least three GP and three outpatient appointments. The Continuity of Care Index (COCI) was calculated separately for visits to the same i) GP and ii) hospital specialty, where 0 represents no continuity and 1 represents all visits to the same GP or specialty. We assessed the association between the indices using univariable and multivariable fractional logit regression. We calculated expected COCI scores for each LTC and assessed variation in the COCI between LTCs assigned to one of 15 clusters of co-occurring diseases derived previously. A sensitivity analysis repeated analysis using the Sequential Continuity (SECON) score, which captures longitudinal continuity. Results Of 1,135,903 patients, 56.2% were ≥60 years. The median (IQR) COCI in GP was 0.22 (0.11-0.40) and in outpatients was 0.33 (0.20-0.52). Although statistically significant (p < 0.001) the relationship between the two measures was clinically insignificant in both univariable and multivariable models. No strong relationships were found between COCI scores and LTC clusters. Similar patterns were found using the SECON score. Conclusions We found no strong association between continuity of care in GP and outpatient settings, and no clear patterns with LTC clusters. This suggests that lack of continuity in secondary care is not compensated for by increased continuity of care in primary care. Key messages • We found no meaningful association between measures of continuity of care in general practice and hospital outpatient settings. • Our findings suggest that lack of continuity of outpatient care is not compensated for by increased continuity in primary care.

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