January 16, 2018

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Long-term health conditions drive A&E visits, not lack of GP services

Rising accident and emergency attendance rates are driven by patients' long term health conditions, and are not related to lack of GP provision, according to a study by Queen Mary University of London of more than 800,000 patients in east London.

Lead researcher Dr Sally Hull from Queen Mary said: "The pressures on emergency departments, especially during winter, are enormous. When departments are very busy, with long waits and difficulties finding beds for people needing admission, it is easy to seek scapegoats and suggest that poorly functioning GP services are to blame for the crisis.

"Contrary to the popular narrative that people are using emergency departments rather than their GP surgery, our research shows that this is not the case. The same people who attend their GP surgery a lot also attend their emergency department a lot. This is largely because they have multiple long term health , both mental and physical, and it is these conditions, along with an ageing population, which are driving the high attendance rates.

"These effects are exacerbated by socioeconomic deprivation. People in the most socially deprived areas develop long term health conditions 10 years earlier than those who are least deprived. These factors combine to put pressure on emergency departments."

Rates of emergency department (ED) attendance have more than tripled over the past 50 years, from 105/1,000 population in 1961 to 373/1,000 population in 2015-6. Previous studies found that socioeconomic deprivation was a major influence on ED attendance, but the studies were based on GP practice level and population data.

For the first time in the UK, the study, published in the British Journal of General Practice, looks at anonymised data from individual patients, and links their separate GP and ED records to get a more accurate picture of attendances over a two year period.

The team analysed data from 819,590 GP registered patients in 136 practices in the east London Clinical Commissioning Groups of Newham, Tower Hamlets and City & Hackney and found:

Dr Sally Hull added: "There are suggestions that units can be reduced and replaced with community-based support. This would require investment in both social care and community health services, and close alignment with the perceived needs of patients seeking urgent care. It is crucial that we carry out studies like this to understand why people attend departments, and to identify the services which can be safely taken over by GP and community services."

The authors caution that, as the study is set in east London, it is not representative of the country as a whole. The findings are relevant to other inner urban areas with similar levels of material deprivation and ethnic minority populations.

More information: Sally A Hull et al, Population and patient factors affecting emergency department attendance in London: retrospective cohort analysis of linked primary and secondary care records, British Journal of General Practice (2018). DOI: 10.3399/bjgp18X694397

Journal information: British Journal of General Practice

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