• J Health Econ · Sep 2016

    Can increased primary care access reduce demand for emergency care? Evidence from England's 7-day GP opening.

    • Peter Dolton and Vikram Pathania.
    • Department of Economics, University of Sussex, United Kingdom; CEP, LSE, United Kingdom. Electronic address: p.dolton@sussex.ac.uk.
    • J Health Econ. 2016 Sep 1; 49: 193-208.

    AbstractRestricted access to primary care can lead to avoidable, excessive use of expensive emergency care. Since 2013, partly to alleviate overcrowding at the Accident & Emergency (A&E) units of hospitals, the UK has been piloting 7-day opening of General Practitioner (GP) practices to improve primary care access for patients. We evaluate the impact of these pilots on patient attendances at A&E. We estimate that 7-day GP opening has reduced A&E attendances by patients of pilot practices by 9.9% with most of the impact on weekends which see A&E attendances fall by 17.9%. The effect is non-monotonic in case severity with most of the fall occurring in cases of moderate severity. An additional finding is that there is also a 9.9% fall in weekend hospital admissions (from A&E) which is entirely driven by a fall in admissions of elderly patients. The impact on A&E attendances appears to be bigger among wealthier patients. We present evidence in support of a causal interpretation of our results and discuss policy implications.Copyright © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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