Abstract
BackgroundFactors contributing to decisions to refer children for scheduled appointments at medical paediatric outpatient clinics are not well understood. Our aim was to describe practice-level characteristics associated with referrals to general paediatric clinics.MethodsIn this cross-sectional study the setting was general practices in three health boards in Scotland, NHS Grampian, NHS Highland and NHS Tayside The outcome was average annual number of referrals per 1000 children between 2011 and 2017. Univariate and multivariate analyses related the outcome to practice characteristics. For each practice the following characteristics were determined: distance from hospital; area deprivation; number of children registered; presence of ≥ 1 general practitioner with a child health interest and practice ownership.ResultsThere were 62 practices in NHS Grampian, 63 in NHS Highland, and 65 in NHS Tayside; representative annual number of referrals to paediatric clinics per capita were 22, 34, and 35/1000 respectively. In the multivariate model, the number of referrals was inversely related to number of children in the practice (0.8 % fall per 1000 children [95 % confidence interval, CI, 0.5, 1.1]) and was higher from practices in the more deprived areas by a mean 55 % [95 % CI 9, 121] compared to less deprived areas. The number of referrals from a practice rose by 0.91 % [95 % CI 0.86, 0.97] for each additional partner in the practice.ConclusionSome practice-level characteristics were related to the standardised number of referrals, and associations differed between regions.
Highlights
There is a well-recognised call to transform child health services in the UK and adopt a more integrated model of care [1, 2]
The focus on transformation has been greater for unscheduled care than for scheduled care, and this reflects the pressure on secondary care services from the rising numbers of short stay unscheduled admissions to paediatric wards across the UK [3, 4]
Scheduled referrals to secondary care services almost always come from scheduled General Practitioners (GPs) care, with small numbers
Summary
There is a well-recognised call to transform child health services in the UK and adopt a more integrated model of care [1, 2]. The focus on transformation has been greater for unscheduled care than for scheduled care, and this reflects the pressure on secondary care services from the rising numbers of short stay unscheduled admissions to paediatric wards across the UK [3, 4]. Health care in the UK is provided free at the point of delivery. General Practitioners (GPs) provide both scheduled and unscheduled primary care health care, and act as a gate-keeper to secondary care services. Scheduled referrals to secondary care services almost always come from scheduled GP care, with small numbers. Our aim was to describe practice-level characteristics associated with referrals to general paediatric clinics
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