RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Is continuity of primary care declining in England? Practice-level longitudinal study, 2012-2017 JF British Journal of General Practice JO Br J Gen Pract FD British Journal of General Practice SP BJGP.2020.0935 DO 10.3399/BJGP.2020.0935 A1 Peter Tammes A1 Richard Morris A1 Mairead Murphy A1 Chris Salisbury YR 2020 UL http://bjgp.org/content/early/2020/12/13/BJGP.2020.0935.abstract AB Background: Continuity of care is a core principle of primary care and related to improved patient outcomes and reduced healthcare costs. Evidence suggests continuity of care is declining. Aim: (i) to confirm reports of declining continuity of care, (ii) to explore differences in decline according to practice characteristics, (iii) to examine associations between practice populations or appointment provision and changes in continuity of care. Design and Setting: Longitudinal study of aggregated practice-level data from repeated questions in GP-Patient surveys between 2012-2017 on having a preferred GP, seeing this GP always/often (usually), appointment system and practice population characteristics, linked to rural/urban location and deprivation. Method: Multilevel modelling; time (level-1) and practices (level-2). Results: 56.7% of patients had a preferred GP in 2012, declining by 9.4%-points (95%CI -9.6 to -9.2) by 2017. 66.4% of patients with a preferred GP saw this GP usually in 2012, which declined by 9.7%-points (95%CI -10.0 to -9.4) by 2017. This decline was visible in all types of practices, irrespective of baseline continuity, rural/urban location, or deprivation. At practice-level, an increase over time in the percentage of patients reporting good overall experience of making appointments was associated with an increase in both the percentage of patients having a preferred GP, and the percentage of patients being able to see that GP usually. Conclusion: Patients reported a steady decline in continuity of care over time, which should concern clinicians and policymakers. The ability of practices to offer patients a satisfactorily working appointment system could partly counteract this decline.