Report on the Performance of General Practices in Whānau Ora Collectives as at September 2014

Report on the Performance of General Practices in …
24 Feb 2015
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Report on the Performance of General Practices in …
24 Feb 2015
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This report focuses on the performance of general practices in Whānau Ora collectives – using results from the software package HealthStat, which collects an anonymous summary of patient health information from general practices in Whānau Ora collectives.

Although not all collectives include general practice providers, the data collected for this report can help highlight any changes in performance over time for health providers in the collectives.

The report includes results for key HealthStat indicators identified by the Ministry of Health, Te Puni Kōkiri, and Tumu Whakarae (DHB Māori Managers) as strongly associated with morbidity and mortality for Māori.

The Ministry publishes these performance reports on a quarterly basis.

Methodology

The report compares two samples: a Whānau Ora sample and a national sample, with the national sample acting as a benchmark.

The Ministry formed the Whānau Ora sample, comprising a selection of Māori and Pacific providers with practices belonging to Whānau Ora collectives, by drawing on existing agreements with Māori provider practices and then recruiting seven Pacific provider practices also, as part of Whānau Ora collectives.

The national sample was selected from a list of all practices providing general primary care services that use Med-Tech (patient management software). The sampling methodology was designed to deliver a geographically representative sample of 100 practices. The overall response rate was 84 percent. The response rate from low-decile high Māori and Pacific population practices that appeared in the random sample was 100 percent; therefore, the national sample is slightly biased in favour of these populations. Also, because the national sample is randomly selected, practices may belong to both samples.

The number of practices in each sample is subject to change because of practice closures and mergers. The number of practices in the national sample is maintained near 100, while the focus of the Whānau Ora sample is to reflect the populations served in the Whānau Ora initiative.

Key Results

 

The improvements in the year ended September 2014 include:

·       increased achievement against the ‘Cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk recorded’ indicator: increased from 68.4 percent to 86.0 percent (17.6%)

·       increased achievement against the ‘Diabetes patient review’ indicator: increased from 69.9 percent to 79.3 percent (9.4%)

·       increased achievement against the ‘Smoking cessation advice’ indicator: increase from 72.4 percent to 88.9 percent (16.5%).

Compared with the national sample, the Whānau Ora sample performed as well as or better in the following indicators:

·       CVD risk recorded

·       diabetes patient review

·       smoking cessation advice

·       mammography for high needs

·       flu vaccination 65+

·       percentage of enrolled patients with prescriptions for conditions and diagnosis – three out of four indicators (asthma, depression and diabetes)

·       mean fee charged

·       medium BMI.

The Whānau Ora sample did not perform as well in the following indicators:

·       diabetes management

·       cervical smear recorded

·       percentage of enrolled patients with prescriptions for conditions and diagnosis – one out of four indicators (ischaemic heart disease)

·       mental health.

Overall, the Whānau Ora sample results are positive, particularly given the fact that 59.5 percent of patients enrolled in practices in the Whānau Ora sample are high health-needs patients (Māori, Pacific and/or people living in areas of high socioeconomic deprivation). By comparison only 25.4 percent of the population enrolled in practices in the national sample have high health needs.

The highlights seen in the Whānau Ora sample results cannot be directly attributed to any one particular programme or initiative; they are indicative of positive changes to service delivery as a whole.

 

Page last modified: 15 Mar 2018