Polyclinics in England

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Polyclinics in England are intended to offer a far greater range of services than can be offered by current general practitioner (GP) practices and local health centres. In addition to traditional GP services they would offer extended urgent care, healthy living services, community mental health services and social care, whilst being more accessible and less medicalised than hospitals1. A variety of models have been proposed23, ranging from networks of existing clinics to larger premises with several colocated general practitioner (GP) practices, more extensive facilities and additional services provided by allied healthcare professionals.

Some have claimed that the introduction of polyclinics will require the closure of existing GP practices although the government denies this.

Contents

Polyclinic services

The polyclinic model proposed in London will provide:

The government accepts that the polyclinic model may not be suitable for rural areas but may be popular in the larger conurbations.

History

Generalised health centres and health clinics offering a mix of community based health care services have existed in England since the early years of the National Health Service (NHS)citation needed. They have typically provided specialist care such as opthalmolgy, podiatry, dentistry, minor injuries nursing, and therefore provided services that fell between that of the GP service and those available at the hospital.

Some primary care trusts in England have attempted to bring together even more services into such centres, most notably by co-locating GPs, health laboratories, pharmacies and other services under one roof. The Heart of Hounslow Centre for Health for example has has GP services, outpatient care, physiotherapy, dentistry, podiatry, social care outreach, mental health services for children and a gym to help in rehabilitation. All these services take place in a purpose-built facility4. However, the centre does not provide urgent care and only has a limited range of diagnostics.

Polyclinics were proposed only for London by Professor the Lord Darzi of Denham in his review of healthcare in London for NHS London: Healthcare for London: A Framework for Action1. In the final report of his subsequent national review for the Department of Health, High Quality Care for All5 Lord Darzi has not suggested that polyclinics would be appropriate elsewhere; instead he suggests "GP-led health centres". He explained the difference between the two models to the House of Commons Health Select Committee on 19 July 20086.

A key principle of A Framework for Action is to "localise where possible, centralise where necessary." This would move "routine healthcare" away from acute hospitals and into community-based centres to provide a one-stop-shop for health care. "More complex care" would remain centralised. A key part of the plan is to extend the opening times of such centres, especially in the evenings, to make them more accessible to working people.

While polyclinics had not been widely implemented across England prior to 2008, they have existed in Australia, France, Germany (since 2004), Switzerland and Russia7; and in many countries across Asia and Africa8, although several of these countries are now seeking to remove them9. In Russia, where they were introduced under communism, attempts were made to replace them with a more western model by the new Russian government10.

Rationale

The Department of Health and the government claim that polyclinics offer:

  1. A way of providing more services in the community closer to home and at more convenient times (including antenatal and postnatal care, healthy living information, community mental health services, community care, and social care and specialist advice)
  2. An improved structure within which GPs and other health and social care professionals can work together
  3. Improved care for patients with chronic or complex conditions
  4. A shift in the focus of urgent care out of hospitals and into polyclinics7.

A report by the King's Fund has questioned many of these, observing that:

  1. Access to services was likely to be harder in rural areas and in urban areas where new buildings were not situated close to transport hubs
  2. Simply putting healthcare professionals in the same location is in practice often not sufficient to generate co-working or integration of care
  3. While the co-location of multiple services presents opportunities for delivering more integrated care, particularly for people with chronic diseases, the evidence suggests that in practice these opportunities are often lost, and accessibility of primary care is likely to be reduced for most patients if their GPs move into polyclinics, particularly in rural settings (a point emphasised in The Times11)
  4. There is limited evidence that quality of care for services shifted out of hospitals is comparable, and there is evidence that quality may be decreased in certain cases; the limited inspection and accreditation of out-of-hospital care is also a serious deficit in quality assurance

The report also observed that the proposals were likely to increase professional isolation, and threaten both professional development and motivation, and continuity of care, and that pre-existing problems in healthcare to do with the lack of an overall governance structure, and unclear lines of accountability had not been addressed.

It concluded that while polyclinics offered real opportunities for some health communities to establish more integrated, patient-focused care, these would only be realised with considerable investment of time, effort and resources into their planning and development, and that the primary focus should be on developing new pathways, technologies and ways of working rather than new buildings12.

The Conservative Party leader David Cameron does not object in principle to the case for for polyclinics but is worried that they might be imposed against the wishes of communities. He has suggested that close to 1,600 GP surgeries may have to close across the country as a whole if polyclinics are established in the way the government is suggesting13. The Health Minister Ben Bradshaw, however, denied that individual GP practices would be closed as patients would remain registered with their existing GPs14. These figures have also been dismissed15 by Dr Laurence Buckman, chair of the British Medical Association's General Practitioners Committee.

Funding

It is unclear whether polyclinics will be funded in addition to existing GP services or whether they will take funding away from existing practices. Although Lord Darzi has claimed that their funding would be in addition to existing funding16, following the publication of his report, eight London primary care trusts have drawn up plans to relocate more than 100 urban GP surgeries into polyclinics17. The Conservative Party claim that unless existing surgeries close, polyclinics will leave a £1.4 billion "black hole" in public finances18.

Implementation

Polyclinics were originally planned for and implemented in London, with every primary care trust in the country subsequently required to have at least one new "GP-led health centre"141920. All of the first wave of polyclinics in London, which form a pilot of the model, will be of the federated/networked model and will involve "existing services working more closely together"21.

As of August 2008, more than a quarter of PCTs had plans to implement a polyclinic or GP-led health centre22, including Birmingham, Cumbria, Lincolnshire, Rochdale, Cheshire, Essex and Bolton. More than 50 PCTs admitted that they would not consult local communities over plans to build polyclinics, some citing advice from the Department of Health as the reason, despite repeated government promises that they would not be introduced without consultation23.

The country-wide rollout of GP-led health centres has been criticised by doctors' leaders and patient groups. Dr. Richard Vautrey, deputy chairman of the BMA, called it "a government plan that is potentially going to waste hundreds of millions of pounds of scarce NHS resources, creating very large health centres that many areas of the country simply don't need or want"24, while the Patients Association noted that gathering services under one roof in rural areas "may actually put patients at risk" and noted that rural patients already had to travel further and were more reliant on primary care25. The other political parties have also criticised it, with the leader of the Liberal Democrats Nick Clegg calling it "the central imposition of a polyclinic on every primary care trust, regardless of the geography, demographics and clinical needs of the area" while acknowledging that they might be a good thing for people in some communities26 and Conservative leader David Cameron suggesting large-scale closures of existing GP surgeries13.

The results of a freedom of information request by Pulse on the plans for polyclinics show that nursing staff could outnumber doctors by up to three to one. The BMA said the plans would lead to "cut-price general practice". A spokesperson for the Department of Health said "where people choose to register with a GP-led health centre, they should expect the same quality and continuity of care from GPs and other primary care clinicians as they would from any other GP practice"2728.

On 10 September 2008, an NHS London press release29 and fact sheet30 announced details of 5 of a possible 13 polyclinics in the first wave in London31. They will be developed by the following primary care trusts:

Also anticipated in the first wave are31:

Opinion

Opinion on the plans for polyclinics is polarised.

  • Paul Ward, Deputy Chief Executive of the Terrence Higgins Trust, has commented29:

    With HIV now a long-term condition, polyclinics have a very important role in the delivery of HIV care. Many routine services, such as regular blood tests and check ups shouldn't require a trip to a hospital based clinic. Integrating services can only make life easier for people living with HIV so it’s definitely a welcome move.

  • Samantha Mauger, Chief Executive of Age Concern London, has said29:

    We welcome the intention of providing an integrated local health centre delivering a wide range of services in a joined-up approach. If this is done with care it could benefit many older people. While older people may be worried about possible changes to the services they currently use, many suffer at present from lack of coordination between different health and social care services. The NHS needs to work with and listen to local people's views about the services to be provided. We need improved, responsive services and easy access for Londoners of all ages from all communities.

  • Although government-backed, one study by Professor Martin Roland32, of the University of Manchester concluded that such clinics are likely to offer poorer choice and worse access than traditional GP surgeries33; and they have faced opposition from doctors, health experts, and patients3435.
  • The British Medical Journal has claimed that the government has been bringing pressure to bear on Primary Care Trusts to implement them despite this opposition36. Despite this they are a mainstay of the report by British peer Professor Lord Darzi into the modernisation of the NHS.
  • The British Medical Association have been opposed to polyclinics from the start, observing that larger clinics were already emerging where needed, that forcing their introduction was wasteful and costly, and that they would undermine the value of a relationship existing between GP and patient37. They have further commented that the design of the proposals appears deliberately to disadvantage existing GPs from applying to run the clinics, leaving the way open for privatisation of GP services38.
  • A significant proportion of the general public are opposed to polyclinics, with more than a million signing the British Medical Association's petition against them39. Press reports suggested that they were unpopular with patients, particularly the elderly, who feared polyclinics would ruin their relationship with their doctor and were finding they had to travel further to see a doctor40. However, of the 4,372 individual responses and 359 organisational responsescitation needed to NHS London's official consultation, 51% supported the proposal that "almost all GP practices in London should be part of a polyclinic, either networked or same-site"4142. The consultation noted that some respondents were concerned about the effect of polyclinics on the GP-patient relationship, worse continuity of care, possible extra travel time, cost, governance, and whether the money would be better spent on improving existing services43.
  • The Patients Association are concerned that polyclinics could jeopardise the patient-doctor relationship which they regard as a central plank of effective and personalised care and as "central to every patient's experience of healthcare", particularly in those with long-term or complex conditions. They also observed that polyclinics are not necessary to providing one-stop care, something already delivered in the NHS at one stop shops, and that they are likely to lead to the loss of other health services in rural areas25.
  • The Liberal Democrats have criticised polyclinics as part of the government's "obsession with imposing models of care from the centre", noting that this flies in the face of their "rhetoric on local decision-making"37.
  • The NHS Alliance have called polyclinics "lost in translation", commenting that while they are good when implemented in the right way, this "means general practices locally deciding to integrate their services" with willingness from both doctors and local people. "The BMA and patients are afraid that they might be losing the good bits of general practice - and the way that polyclinics have been implemented in some places means they have got a point."39
  • The Royal College of General Practitioners, who support the notion of GPs working in federations44, have nonetheless condemned the government's plans for polyclinics, and have set out their own proposal for "Primary Care Federations"4546, saying "GPs and patients must be involved in the planning, and we cannot afford for existing high quality GP practices to be destabilised"39.
  • Opinion pieces for The Guardian have differed dramatically in tone. Polly Toynbee suggested that "it's hard to see a downside for patients" and GPs' protests are "all about profits, not patients"47, while George Monbiot called it the "outright privatisation of primary healthcare" and suggested it would make primary care "more expensive and less efficient" and see "those who can't afford to pay are either excluded or treated like battery pigs"48.
  • The Independent has included a balanced article on them, explaining the possible benefits and disadvantages49.

External references

References

  1. ^ a b Professor the Lord Darzi of Denham KBE (2007-07-11). "Healthcare for London: A Framework for Action" (pdf). NHS London. Retrieved on 2008-08-17.
  2. ^ Professor the Lord Darzi of Denham KBE (2007-07-11). "Healthcare for London: A Framework for Action, p.93" (pdf). NHS London. Retrieved on 2008-08-17.
  3. ^ (2007-11-30). "Healthcare for London: Consulting the Capital, p.41" (pdf). NHS London. Retrieved on 2008-08-18.
  4. ^ Victoria Vaughan (2007-09-06). "London unveils first polyclinic". Health Service Journal. Retrieved on 2008-09-05.
  5. ^ Professor the Lord Darzi of Denham KBE (2008-06-30). "High Quality Care for All: NHS Next Stage Review final report". Department of Health. Retrieved on 2008-08-17.
  6. ^ "Uncorrected transcript of oral evidence to the House of Commons Health Select Committee". Hansard (2008-07-17). Retrieved on 2008-09-04.
  7. ^ a b NLH - Health Management - Polyclinics. Retrieved on 2008-07-03. 
  8. ^ Polyclinic
  9. ^ Lakhani, Prof. Mayur; Baker, Dr. Maureen; Field, Prof. Steve (2007). The Future Direction of General Practice - a roadmap (pdf). ISBN 978-0-85084-315-6. Retrieved on 2008-07-03. 
  10. ^ Ershova I, Rider O, Gorelov V (December 2007). "Polyclinics in London". Lancet 370 (9603): 1890–1. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(07)61793-0. PMID 18068500. 
  11. ^ Keith Hopcroft (2008-06-12). "What is wrong with polyclinics? Try the death of GP care". The Times. Retrieved on 2008-07-03.
  12. ^ Imison, Candace; Naylor, Chris; Maybin, Jo (2008-06-05). Will polyclinics deliver integrated care?. The King's Fund. ISBN 978 1 85717 569 1. Retrieved on 2008-07-03. 
  13. ^ a b David Cameron (2008-04-21). "David Cameron: Speech on Primary Care".
  14. ^ a b "GPs fears about polyclinics" (2008-07-28). Retrieved on 2008-08-24.
  15. ^ "Row breaks out over polyclinic impact on nearby surgeries". Pulse (2008-08-25). Retrieved on 2008-08-27.
  16. ^ "No GP surgeries will close". BBC News (2008-07-06). Retrieved on 2008-08-24.
  17. ^ Anna Davis (2008-05-28). "100 GP sites facing axe under polyclinic plans". Evening Standard. Retrieved on 2008-08-18.
  18. ^ Sara Gaines (2008-06-11). "NHS polyclinic plans will leave £1.4bn black hole, Tories claim". The Guardian, Comment is Free. Retrieved on 2008-08-18.
  19. ^ "House of Commons Hansard Debates for 17 Jun 2008 (pt 0007)". Hansard (2008-06-17). Retrieved on 2008-08-24.
  20. ^ "Doctors' leaders claim patients will suffer from polyclinics plan". The Times (2008-06-12). Retrieved on 2008-08-24.
  21. ^ Dave West (2008-09-04). "London denies polyclinic U-turn". Health Service Journal. Retrieved on 2008-09-04.
  22. ^ "Darzi polyclinics just the tip of the iceberg as second wave revealed". Pulse (2008-08-12). Retrieved on 2008-08-24.
  23. ^ "Polyclinics will be imposed despite ministers’ promises". The Sunday Telegraph (2008-08-03). Retrieved on 2008-08-25.
  24. ^ "Polyclinics to replace traditional doctors' surgeries" (2008-02-16). Retrieved on 2008-08-25.
  25. ^ a b "Polyclinics". The Patients Association. Retrieved on 2008-07-03.
  26. ^ Graham Tibbetts (2008-06-10). "Nick Clegg: Polyclinics are being imposed across country". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved on 2008-08-24.
  27. ^ Gareth Iacobucci (2008-09-10). "Nurses to outnumber GPs three to one in Darzi centres". Pulse. Retrieved on 2008-09-10.
  28. ^ Kate Devlin (2008-09-10). "Polyclinics 'will contain three nurses to every GP'", The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved on 10 September 2008. 
  29. ^ a b c NHS London (2008-09-10). "Transformation of London's healthcare begins". Press release. Retrieved on 2008-09-11.
  30. ^ "Polyclinics in London - fact sheet" (doc). NHS London (2008-09-09). Retrieved on 2008-09-11.
  31. ^ a b "First polyclinic will serve 50,000 patients", Pulse (2008-09-16). Retrieved on 17 September 2008. 
  32. ^ University of Manchester - School of Medicine - Professor Martin Roland CBE
  33. ^ BBC News (2008-03-21). "Hospital and GP reforms 'flawed'". BBC News. Retrieved on 2008-03-23.
  34. ^ Nancollas CE (April 2008). "Doctors warn of premature move to polyclinics: Joined-up thinking?". BMJ 336 (7647): 736. doi:10.1136/bmj.39535.425139.1F. PMID 18390503. 
  35. ^ "Health experts condemn London polyclinic plans". The Guardian (2007-07-11).
  36. ^ O'Dowd A (March 2008). "Doctors warn of premature move to polyclinics". BMJ 336 (7645): 635. doi:10.1136/bmj.39521.479618.DB. PMID 18356228. 
  37. ^ a b "GPs' leader hits out at plans for Soviet-style 'polyclinics'". The Observer (2008-02-17). Retrieved on 2008-07-03.
  38. ^ "Doctors fear 'GP privatisation'". BBC News (2007-12-26). Retrieved on 2008-07-06.
  39. ^ a b c O'Dowd A (June 2008). "More than a million people signed petition against polyclinics". BMJ 336 (7658): 1399. doi:10.1136/bmj.a415. PMID 18566072. 
  40. ^ Brendan O'Neill (2008-07-01). "Editorial: I don't want any more 'patient choice'!". Spiked. Retrieved on 2008-07-03.
  41. ^ NHS London (2008-05-06). "Healthcare for London - Consulting the Capital update". Press release. Retrieved on 2008-08-19.
  42. ^ "Londoners back polyclinics, survey shows". Health Service Journal (2008-05-07). Retrieved on 2008-08-14.
  43. ^ "Report on the consultation and recommendations for change" (pdf). NHS London. Retrieved on 2008-08-25.
  44. ^ "Debate: Do patients want polyclinics?". Pulse (2008-09-03). Retrieved on 2008-09-04.
  45. ^ (2008-06). "Primary Care Federations - Putting patients first" (pdf). Royal College of General Practitioners. Retrieved on 2008-09-04.
  46. ^ Royal College of Physicians, Royal College of General Practitioners & Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health (2008-04-11). "Teams without Walls: The value of medical innovation and leadership" (pdf). Royal College of Physicians. Retrieved on 2008-08-14.
  47. ^ Toynbee, Polly (2008-06-06). "Don't be fooled: this doctors' protest is all about profits, not patients". The Guardian, Comment is Free. Retrieved on 2008-08-14.
  48. ^ George Monbiot (2008-04-29). "Labour's perverse polyclinic scheme is the next step in privatising the NHS". The Guardian, Comment is Free. Retrieved on 2008-08-18.
  49. ^ "The Big Question: What are polyclinics, and why are doctors so angry about them?". The Independent (2008-06-13). Retrieved on 2008-08-14.

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