Released 16/08/2010
A new report from leading health care think tank The King's Fund has found that NHS referral management centres (RMCs) and some other interventions to manage GP referrals into secondary care are failing to improve quality and deliver cost savings.
Over nine million referrals were made by GPs last year resulting in costs to the NHS of more than £15 billion. The number of referrals made has increased sharply in recent years. Between 2005 and 2009
• referrals to outpatients increased by 19 per cent
• consultant-to-consultant referrals increased by 39 per cent
• other referrals increased by 41 per cent.
Evidence shows that not all GP referrals into secondary care are clinically necessary, or require care to be provided within hospital settings.
PCTs have adopted different strategies to improve the quality and appropriateness of referrals by setting up RMCs, clinical triage and assessment services, offering GPs financial incentives or providing them with clinical guidelines. These interventions aim to improve quality and to reduce costs by reducing unnecessary and inappropriate referrals.
The report reveals that while half of the PCTs studied believed that their referral management schemes had reduced demand for secondary care, those using active referral management strategies such as RMCs, were, in fact, no more likely to achieve this than other PCTs. It also highlighted evidence that some of these schemes could undermine quality, by misdirecting referrals in the absence of full clinical information or by delaying patients' access to a specialist.
The research found that the more active the intervention into the process of GP referral, the greater likelihood that the scheme failed to deliver value for money. In contrast, successful strategies for managing referrals were likely to include peer review and audit, be linked to clear referral criteria and evidence-based guidelines, and to a system enabling and using feedback from hospital consultants.
Experience from GP fund-holding suggests that GP commissioners will turn to referral management strategies when they take responsibility for the bulk of the NHS commissioning budget, as outlined in the recent NHS White Paper.
Candace Imison, deputy director of policy at The King's Fund, said: "We found that the most interventionist management approaches from PCTs, such as referral management centres, were unlikely to offer value for money and could actually increase overall costs to the NHS.
"All future GP-commissioning consortia will need to consider referral management options, so we're pleased that our analysis of what works can be used by commissioners now and in the future to determine which approaches could deliver cost and quality benefits within their local health economy."
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