PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Steve Iliffe AU - Vari Drennan AU - Jill Manthorpe AU - Heather Gage AU - Sue L Davies AU - Helen Massey AU - Cherill Scott AU - Sally Brearley AU - Claire Goodman TI - Nurse case management and general practice: implications for GP consortia AID - 10.3399/bjgp11X601370 DP - 2011 Oct 01 TA - British Journal of General Practice PG - e658--e665 VI - 61 IP - 591 4099 - http://bjgp.org/content/61/591/e658.short 4100 - http://bjgp.org/content/61/591/e658.full SO - Br J Gen Pract2011 Oct 01; 61 AB - Background Case management is widely promoted as a means of ensuring continuity of care, improving patient outcomes, and achieving efficient management of resources. Community matrons have been introduced recently as specialists in the case management of patients with multiple complex problems.Aim To understand how nurse case managers are seen by GPs and NHS managers.Setting (1) Telephone interviews with 41 community nurse managers recruited from 10 English strategic health authorities and two Welsh health boards; (2) face-to-face interviews with 12 nurse case managers, 12 GPs and five NHS community service managers in three study sites with different population and practitioner characteristics.Method Semi-structured individual interviews, by telephone or face to face.Results Attitudes among GPs to nurse case managers were shaped by perceptions of the quality of community nursing on the one hand and the perceived benefit of case management as a method of reducing hospital use on the other. The dominant mood was scepticism about the ability of nurse case managers to reduce hospital admissions. Community matrons were seen as staff who were imposed on local health services, sometimes to detrimental effect.Conclusion The introduction of case management and community matrons may disrupt existing communities of practice and be perceived negatively, at least in areas where good working relationships between nurses and GPs have developed. Commissioners should be aware of the potential resistance to changes in skill mix and role in nursing services, and promote innovation in ways that minimise disruption to functional communities of practice.