THE FUTURE OF GENERAL PRACTICE
The future of general practice is on a precipice. A perfect storm of an ageing general practice workforce,1,2 a declining interest in general practice as a career,1 and widespread burnout exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic3 leaves general practice in a precarious position worldwide. Nearly a quarter of England’s GP workforce are aged ≥55 years,2 with an even bleaker picture in Australia with the proportion closer to 40%.1 Final-year medical students from Australian medical schools listing general practice as their first preference specialty is at a 9-year low of 13.8%.1,4 A recent systematic review has highlighted how GPs’ wellbeing across the globe has been adversely affected by the pandemic, with reports of many GPs planning to leave medicine entirely.3
A shrinking GP workforce, combined with the increasing prevalence of chronic diseases with complex comorbidities, increasing prevalence of mental health issues, and an ageing population will further overburden primary care systems, leading to increased presentations to emergency departments, delayed care, missed test results, and poorer health outcomes. This will ultimately result in increased costs for governments and individuals. Recent data from consumers indicates these issues have already emerged in Australia (Box 1). Resolving such workforce issues will take years, and despite various commitments from governments the jury is still out as to whether we are seeing the beginnings of true primary care reform or just more band-aid solutions. This article proposes applying the concept of a learning health system (LHS) as a framework to revitalise general practice and drive the transformation and sustenance of high-performing primary care systems.
In 2021, a survey was distributed to 5100 Australian adults providing insights into health service use and satisfaction during the COVID-19 pandemic. Results showed:
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LEARNING HEALTH SYSTEMS
The cost-effectiveness of general practice in managing chronic diseases and multimorbidity is well demonstrated.6 It is vital that we capitalise on the value that primary care systems can offer in their current state while waiting for governments in many countries, including the UK, to translate election promises into action.7,8 To do this, there needs to be concerted effort from within the profession to enable the creation and sustenance of high-performing general practice clinics. Working with effective teams in efficient operational models will mean GPs can avoid burnout while maintaining confidence in the impact their work is having on their patient population.
Much work is being done at the macro- (for example, national and state governments) and meso-levels (for example, Primary Health Networks [PHNs] in Australia and Integrated Care Systems [ICSs] in England) of primary care systems on measuring the quality and cost-effectiveness of care. However, there is a scarcity of literature at the micro-level where the ‘rubber hits the road’ — where GP-led, multi-stakeholder teams operate, and patients interact with, general practice clinics and their staff. How practices can best utilise such macro- and meso-level data to implement change and improve performance at the practice level is all-too-often missing from reform models. Developing a system that facilitates the translation of such data insights into improvements of day-to-day practice is a key next step. There have been a handful of concepts proposed that facilitate high performance, such as the ‘10 building blocks of high-performing primary care’9 and the patient-centred medical home (PCMH)10 models, which originated from the US, and the NHS productive series,11 which provides practical implementation guides for quality improvement. However, there is a real risk that recommendations made at a macro-level and based on broad principles but with limited understanding of local factors will exacerbate rather than relieve current pressures. Specifically, there is little evidence-based guidance for GPs and practice managers on how to best implement high-performing operational models and systems within their practices. This represents an opportunity for an emerging field of research and implementation within primary care micro-systems.
We propose applying the concept of an LHS as a framework to drive the transformation and sustenance of high-performing general practice. It refers to a healthcare system that ‘consistently delivers reliable performance and constantly improves, systematically and seamlessly, with each care experience — in short, a system with an ability to learn’.12 Core features of an LHS include: 1) science and informatics to measure real-time access to knowledge and digital capture of the care experience; 2) patient–clinician partnerships that engage and empower patients; 3) incentives that reward high- value care and emphasise transparency; 4) a continuous learning ethos that focuses on a leadership- instilled culture of learning and provides supportive system competencies; and 5) developing organisational structures and governance mechanisms that take into account relevant policies and regulations, and facilitate collaboration, learning, and research.13
LHSs can exist at all levels of the primary care system: at a macro-level within state and national governments, at a meso-level within PHNs and ICSs, and at a micro-level within individual practices. Most LHSs described in the literature have been hospital-based systems in the US,14 with minimal studies about LHSs within primary care systems outside of the US. We have initiated a programme of work in Australia investigating how the concept of an LHS may be applied in our unique primary health system, with applications to other primary care systems including those in Britain.15 Our recent case study, modelling a university- based general practice in Sydney against LHS principles, has indicated that the practice is operating across several dimensions of the LHS framework, and that staff are willing to embrace additional elements of an LHS.15 Practical examples of how the domains of an LHS are implemented at the practice-level are also provided, which serve as useful references for practices operating in different contexts. The study also shows overlap between the dimensions of the LHS framework and the quadruple aim framework,16 which is often used as a key measure for health system performance.
CONCLUSION
The time is ripe for a broader examination of the LHS concept within primary care settings. A scoping review17 has identified key focus areas for future research: 1) addressing barriers and facilitators to engaging GPs, clinic management staff, and patients in LHS research, including upskilling them in knowledge of complex systems theory, implementation science, and informatics, and the appropriate use of mixed-methods study designs; 2) the development of rapid analytic tools for practices to obtain timely feedback and evaluation instead of the traditional, closed-system plan-do-study- act (PDSA) models; and 3) the application of implementation frameworks specifically for LHSs within primary care.
Successful implementation of the LHS framework within primary care systems at the micro-level could well lead to significant measurable improvements in systems’ performance, thereby improving population health, enhancing the patient experience, reducing cost of care, and improving clinician satisfaction. Clearly, we must not lose sight of the greater recognition and investment needed in primary care at national levels, but there is an opportunity for practices to shape implementation of change at the local level. The LHS framework is a concept worthy of further investment and research in the effort to build sustainable and high-performing primary care systems for the future.
Notes
Provenance
Freely submitted; not externally peer reviewed.
Competing interests
The authors have declared no competing interests.
- © British Journal of General Practice 2023