Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).
Session Chair: Jonas Jonasson Session Chair: Pengyi Shi
Location:Forum 8
Presentations
Continuity of care increases clinical productivity in primary care
Harshita Kajaria Montag1, Michael Freeman2, Stefan Scholtes3
1University of Cambridge, United Kingdom; 2INSEAD, Singapore; 3University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
Discussant: Hummy Song (The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania)
Relational Continuity (RC) in primary care confers many reported benefits, yet it has been in sharp decline. Using multiple econometric techniques on a large consultation-level dataset comprising of 5M patients registered with 300 primary care practices across the UK over the course of 10 years, we find that RC has a significant productivity benefit, with operational and strategic implications for primary care practices and third-party payers.
The power of data: Assessing primary care performance using routinely collected Emergency Department data
Nicos Savva1, Sandra Sülz2, Mark Kinirons3, Richard Leach3
1London Business School; 2Erasmus University Rotterdam; 3Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust and Kings College London
Discussant: Fernanda Bravo (UCLA)
The rising demand for Emergency Department (ED) care is partially driven by the failure to provide timely and high-quality primary care, resulting in patients being forced to use EDs. It is therefore important to identify primary care practices (PCPs) whose patients place a lower burden on ED departments so that best practices can be identified and disseminated, and practices whose patients place a higher burden in order to provide support. This work develops and validates one such methodology.