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UK Experience with the Quality and Outcomes Framework

UK Experience with the Quality and Outcomes Framework. John Hutton IQ Annual Meeting, Hanover February 2012. Background. UK General Practitioners (GPs) are private contractors to the NHS for primary care services

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UK Experience with the Quality and Outcomes Framework

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  1. UK Experience with the Quality and Outcomes Framework John Hutton IQ Annual Meeting, Hanover February 2012

  2. Background • UK General Practitioners (GPs) are private contractors to the NHS for primary care services • The General Medical Services Contract is negotiated between the British Medical Association(BMA) and the NHS Employers organisation • Payment for GPs was based on capitation but since the 1980s elements of pay for performance have been introduced

  3. Pay for Performance in UK Primary Care • Resisted by the BMA because there might be gainers and losers • Lack of acceptance that standards of care should be improved • Small elements of P4P accepted, e.g. for immunisations and cervical smear testing

  4. Changing Attitudes by 2000 • Influence of evidence-based medicine • Acceptance that differing approaches to care were not justified and deficiencies needed to be rectified • GPs willing to accept higher performance standards in return for increased payments • Government willing to put more resources into the NHS

  5. New GMS Contract 2004 • Contract with the Practice not individual GPs • Individual GPs still paid according to patient list size • Opportunity to increase Practice income through the P4P scheme based on the Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF)

  6. Aims of QOF • To reward good practice • To offer incentives for poorly performing practices to raise standards • To reduce geographical variation in primary care provision • To reduce health inequalities • To improve the efficiency of the NHS

  7. Operating Principles • Measurable indicators of performance • Indicators to be evidence-based • Minimum threshold to earn performance points • Increasing rewards for higher performance • Payments achievable linked to Practice size and local disease prevalence • Annual renegotiation of indicators, thresholds and points levels

  8. Design of QOF in 2004 Up to 1050 points awarded in the following areas: • Clinical indicators (550 points) • Organisational indicators (184) • Patient experience (100) • Patient access (50) • Existing fee for service activities (36) • Additional points for overall high achievers (130)

  9. Clinical Domains

  10. Nature of Clinical Indicators • Taken from clinical guidelines (NICE, SIGN, Royal Colleges) • Expert panel process to develop indicators • Mixture of process, intermediate and outcome indicators • Most comprehensive for CVD • Less so for mental health

  11. Additional Domains 2006-9 • Depression • Atrial fibrillation • Chronic kidney disease • Dementia • Obesity • Palliative care • Learning disability • Primary prevention of CVD

  12. Examples of Clinical Indicators Control of Hypertension: • Blood pressure recorded within last 15 months: lower threshold 25% of patients – 1 point; upper threshold 90% - 7 points • Most recent blood pressure reading (measured during previous 15 months) was 150/90mm Hg or lower: minimum threshold 25% - 1 point; maximum threshold 70% - 19 points

  13. Exclusion Patients may be excluded from the numerator and denominator for the following reasons: • Did not respond to 3 invitations for consultation • Newly registered • Newly diagnosed • Declined treatment/intervention • Counter indication, e.g. intolerance or co-morbidity • Already on maximum dose of treatment and failing to respond

  14. NICE Management of QOF Key changes from 2009: • Independent Advisory Committee (QOF AC) • Indicators tested for cost-effectiveness as well as clinical effectiveness • New indicators piloted • Older indicators replaced by new more demanding ones

  15. Development of New Indicators • Stakeholder consultation for suggestions • Mapping against NHS Evidence and DH priorities • QOF AC selects for piloting • Piloting to test feasibility, reliability and acceptability • Cost-effectiveness analysis • QOF AC recommends for adoption • Negotiators consider for inclusion

  16. Retirement of Indicators Existing indicators must be retired to free points for allocation to new indicators. Criteria for retirement include: • Stable high achievement and low exception reporting • Process indicator superseded by an outcome indicator • Poor cost-effectiveness

  17. Evolution of Indicators 2009-11 • Of 153 suggestions 46 (29%) have progressed for development by the QOF AC • Main reasons for rejection were lack of technical feasibility (49) and insufficient evidence (33) • Of the 46 piloted, 29 were recommended to the negotiators for adoption and 22 have been included in the QOF • Of 22 recommended to the negotiators for retirement 10 have been retired from the QOF

  18. Evaluation of QOF • No experimental study designs • Observational data • Poor baseline data so comparison of trends has been used

  19. Impact of QOF • Maximum achievement in 2004 could add 25% to Practice income • Achievement levels high in first year - 83% • Continued improvement in achievement but at same rate as before 2004 • Smaller practices may have reduced variation in performance • Mixed evidence within disease areas but positive for diabetes • Quality of services outside QOF may have risen at a lower rate

  20. End Note • Was it worth it? • Is it worth continuing? • Do the indicators show high performance in service delivery or in negotiation?

  21. Thank you for your attention! InterQuality website: http://www.interqualityproject.eu/

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