Abstract

Traditionally General Practitioner (GP) practices have been labelled as being in Rural, Urban or Semi-Rural areas with no statistical method of identifying which practices fall into each category. The main aim of this study is to investigate whether location and other characteristics can provide a tautology to identify different types of GP practice and compare the prescribing behaviours associated with the different practice types. To achieve this monthly open source prescription data were analysed by practice considering location, practice size, population density and deprivation rankings. One year’s data was subjected to k-means clustering with the results showing that only two different types of GP practice can be classified that are dependent on location characteristics in Northern Ireland. Traditional labels did not describe the two classifications fully and new classifications of Metropolitan and Non-Metropolitan were used. Whilst prescribing patterns were generally similar, it was found that Metropolitan practices generally had higher prescribing rates than Non-Metropolitan practices. Examining prescribing behaviours in accordance with British National Formulary (BNF) categories (known as chapters) showed that Chapter 4 (Central Nervous System) was responsible for most of the difference in prescribing levels. Within Chapter 4 higher prescribing levels were attributable to Analgesic and Antidepressant prescribing. The clusters were finally examined regarding the level of deprivation experienced in the area in which the practice was located. This showed that the Metropolitan cluster, having higher prescription rates, also had a higher proportion of practices located in highly deprived areas making deprivation a contributing factor.

Highlights

  • From the perspective of the data used in this analysis, there is no evidence for the Semi-Rural classification commonly used by healthcare researchers

  • This paper provides a taxonomy for GP practice types that could be used on dashboards for comparing or benchmarking different practices allowing the possibility of applying standardisation to prescribing practices

  • This paper has set out to investigate the relationship between the geographic location of GP practices and their prescription profile

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Summary

Objectives

The main aim of this study is to investigate whether location and other characteristics can provide a tautology to identify different types of GP practice and compare the prescribing behaviours associated with the different practice types. The objectives of this study are to discover how clustering techniques, utilising the geographical features associated with GP practices, can identify practice types and to compare the prescription rates between the identified clusters over British National Formulary (BNF) c­ hapters. It is vital that future classification of GP practices use a standard method, and this study aims to examine the importance of location and prescribing profile in this classification process. This study aims to investigate the prescribing behaviours of identified clusters of practices to determine the effects of geolocation and to elucidate whether it is possible to:

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