The British journal of general practice : the journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Clinical Trial
Telephone consultations to manage requests for same-day appointments: a randomised controlled trial in two practices.
General practitioners (GPs) in the United Kingdom have recently begun to adopt the use of telephone consultation during daytime surgery as a means of managing demand, particularly requests for same-day appointments. However, it is not known whether the strategy actually reduces GP workload. ⋯ Use of telephone consultations for same-day appointments was associated with time saving, and did not result in lower PEI scores. Possibly, however, this short-term saving was offset by higher re-consultation and less use of opportunistic health promotion.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Clinical Trial
A randomised controlled trial of a self-management plan for patients with newly diagnosed angina.
There are approximately 1.8 million patients with angina in the United Kingdom, many of whom report a poor quality of life, including raised levels of anxiety and depression. ⋯ The Angina Plan appears to improve the psychological, symptomatic, and functional status of patients newly diagnosed with angina.
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Multicenter Study
Rural general practitioners' experience of the provision of out-of-hours care: a qualitative study.
Published research into the provision and utilisation of out-of-hours services shows long-term trends towards decreasing personal commitment among general practitioners (GPs). However, the on-call commitments of rural GPs remain especially onerous. There has been little research relating to either rural out-of-hours services or the implications of such services for the families of the providers. ⋯ System difficulties, such as difficulty with obtaining locums and rota extension, need to be addressed at an organisational level. Patient expectations of the role of the rural GP have significant implications for practitioners and their families.
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Multicenter Study Comparative Study
A national evaluation of specialists' clinics in primary care settings.
Encouraged by the increased purchasing power of general practitioners (GPs), specialist-run clinics in general practice and community health care settings (known as specialist outreach clinics) have increased rapidly across England. The activities of local commissioning schemes within primary care groups are likely to accelerate this trend. ⋯ Outreach clinics are a means of improving access to specialist services for patients, in addition to improving the efficiency and quality of health care. Most results were similar across specialties and areas. The benefits of the outreach service need to be weighed against their substantially higher NHS costs, in comparison with outpatients clinics. Outreach clinics are unlikely to be financially justifiable for NHS funding given that the impact on patients' health status was small.
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There is ongoing debate regarding the relative cost effectiveness of different classes of antidepressants. Although factors such as tolerability and discontinuation rates have been taken into account, there has been little consideration of the cost of overdose. In the current study we examined the cost of antidepressant overdose at four teaching hospitals over a four-week period and found that the cost of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor overdose was less than half that of tricyclic anti-depressant overdose. The cost of overdose is often ignored and should be considered in future analyses of the cost effectiveness of different antidepressant prescribing policies in primary care.