Do Primary Care Physicians Acting as Gatekeepers really Improve Health Outcomes and Decrease Costs? A Systematic Review of the Concept Gatekeeping

被引:15
|
作者
Zentner, A. [1 ]
Garrido, M. Velasco [1 ]
Busse, R. [1 ]
机构
[1] Tech Univ Berlin, Fak Wirtschaft & Management 7, Fachgebiet Management Gesundheitswesen, D-10623 Berlin, Germany
关键词
gatekeeping; referral and consultation; primary health care; delivery of health care; health services research; COMMUNITY-PREVENTIVE-SERVICES;
D O I
10.1055/s-0029-1234126
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Aim: The aim of this systematic review was to analyse the effects of gatekeeping where primary care physicians (PCP) control access to specialist care. Methods: Literature search in Medline, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, and a hand search were carried out. Inclusion criteria: (1) intervention: gatekeeping by PCP compared to free access to specialist care; (2) outcomes: health outcomes, health related quality of life, quality of care, utilization of care, costs, satisfaction of patients and providers; (3) design: RCT, quasi-random. CT, CBA, cohort and case control studies, ITS. Data extraction and assessment was done by two independent reviewers according to Cochrane EPOC-Group and USTFCPS. Results: 24 included studies (1989-2007) were as follows: 1 RCT, 2 quasi-randomised CT, 3 prospective, and 12 retrospective cohort studies, 4 CBA, and 2 ITS. 67 % of the studies analysed data from the USA, the remaining from CH, UK, DK and NL. Studies had relevant limitations concerning the quality of execution and publication. Overall 13 of 24 studies reported a positive and two a negative effect of gatekeeping compared to open access models; nine showed no differences. The results varied according to outcome parameters. Conclusions: International evidence on effects of gatekeeping is limited by the low internal validity of studies and applicability to other contexts. It suggests that gatekeeping by PCP decreases utilization of specialist care and health care costs. Based on very few studies health outcomes and patient quality of life in gatekeeping models might be comparable with those in open access models. Evidence is inconsistent or not available concerning the quality of care, patient or provider satisfaction.
引用
收藏
页码:E38 / E44
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Health care utilization, prognosis and outcomes of vestibular disease in primary care settings: systematic review
    Eva Grill
    Mathias Penger
    Erna Kentala
    Journal of Neurology, 2016, 263 : 36 - 44
  • [22] Do hospitalist physicians improve the quality of inpatient care delivery? A systematic review of process, efficiency and outcome measures
    Heather L White
    Richard H Glazier
    BMC Medicine, 9
  • [23] Do hospitalist physicians improve the quality of inpatient care delivery? A systematic review of process, efficiency and outcome measures
    White, Heather L.
    Glazier, Richard H.
    BMC MEDICINE, 2011, 9
  • [24] Do Family Meetings Improve Measurable Outcomes for Patients, Carers, or Health Systems? A Systematic Review
    Reed, Melissa
    Harding, Katherine E.
    AUSTRALIAN SOCIAL WORK, 2015, 68 (02) : 244 - 258
  • [25] Do family meetings for hospitalised palliative care patients improve outcomes and reduce health care costs? A cluster randomised trial
    Hudson, Peter
    Girgis, Afaf
    Thomas, Kristina
    Philip, Jennifer
    Currow, David C.
    Mitchell, Geoffrey
    Parker, Deborah
    Liew, Danny
    Brand, Caroline
    Le, Brian
    Moran, Juli
    PALLIATIVE MEDICINE, 2021, 35 (01) : 188 - 199
  • [26] The common characteristics and outcomes of multidisciplinary collaboration in primary health care: a systematic literature review
    Schepman, Sanneke
    Hansen, Johan
    de Putter, Iris D.
    Batenburg, Ronald S.
    de Bakker, Dinny H.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INTEGRATED CARE, 2015, 15
  • [27] Interventions to improve the use of EMRs in primary health care: a systematic review and meta-analysis
    Hamade, Noura
    Terry, Amanda
    Malvankar-Mehta, Monali
    BMJ HEALTH & CARE INFORMATICS, 2019, 26 (01)
  • [28] A review of primary care interventions to improve health outcomes in adult survivors of adverse childhood experiences
    Korotana, Laurel M.
    Dobson, Keith S.
    Pusch, Dennis
    Josephson, Trevor
    CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY REVIEW, 2016, 46 : 59 - 90
  • [29] Review: Primary care-based general health checks improve surrogate but not clinical outcomes
    Del Mar, Chris
    ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2014, 160 (12)
  • [30] Do clinical decision support tools improve quality of care outcomes in the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease: A systematic review and meta-analysis
    Buzancic, Iva
    Koh, Harvey Jia Wei
    Trin, Caroline
    Nash, Caitlin
    Hadziabdic, Maja Ortner
    Belec, Dora
    Zoungas, Sophia
    Zomer, Ella
    Dalli, Lachlan
    Ademi, Zanfina
    Chua, Bryan
    Talic, Stella
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PREVENTIVE CARDIOLOGY, 2024, 20