Provision of primary care by specialist physicians: a systematic review

Patients with stable chronic diseases such as diabetes and hypertension can be safely managed at the primary care level. Yet many such patients continue to follow-up with specialists at a higher expense with no added benefit. We introduce a new term to describe this phenomenon: scope inversion, defi...

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Main Author: Muhammad Jawad Hashim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2020-03-01
Series:Family Medicine and Community Health
Online Access:https://fmch.bmj.com/content/8/1/e000247.full
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spelling doaj-2de9327cd05241a7b6023dc9eb8861782020-11-25T03:26:41ZengBMJ Publishing GroupFamily Medicine and Community Health2305-69832009-87742020-03-018110.1136/fmch-2019-000247Provision of primary care by specialist physicians: a systematic reviewMuhammad Jawad HashimPatients with stable chronic diseases such as diabetes and hypertension can be safely managed at the primary care level. Yet many such patients continue to follow-up with specialists at a higher expense with no added benefit. We introduce a new term to describe this phenomenon: scope inversion, defined as the provision of primary care by specialist physicians. We aimed to quantify the extent of scope inversion by conducting a systematic review. MEDLINE and five other databases were searched using the keywords ‘specialist AND (routine OR primary) AND provi*’ as well as other variations. The search was limited to human research without restrictions on language or date of publication. The inclusion criterion was studies on rates of the provision of routine primary care by specialist physicians. Thirteen observational studies met the inclusion criteria. A wide range of primary care involvement was observed among specialists, from 2.6% to 65% of clinic visits. Among children, 41.3% of visits with specialists were routine follow-ups for conditions such as allergic rhinitis and seborrhoeic dermatitis which could be managed in primary care. Data quality was moderate to low across the studies due to limitations of source data and varying definitions of primary care. Specialist physicians provide primary care to patients in a substantial proportion of clinic visits. Scope inversion is wasteful as it diverts patients to more expensive care without improving outcomes. A systems approach is needed to mitigate scope inversion and its harmful effects on healthcare service delivery.https://fmch.bmj.com/content/8/1/e000247.full
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Muhammad Jawad Hashim
spellingShingle Muhammad Jawad Hashim
Provision of primary care by specialist physicians: a systematic review
Family Medicine and Community Health
author_facet Muhammad Jawad Hashim
author_sort Muhammad Jawad Hashim
title Provision of primary care by specialist physicians: a systematic review
title_short Provision of primary care by specialist physicians: a systematic review
title_full Provision of primary care by specialist physicians: a systematic review
title_fullStr Provision of primary care by specialist physicians: a systematic review
title_full_unstemmed Provision of primary care by specialist physicians: a systematic review
title_sort provision of primary care by specialist physicians: a systematic review
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
series Family Medicine and Community Health
issn 2305-6983
2009-8774
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Patients with stable chronic diseases such as diabetes and hypertension can be safely managed at the primary care level. Yet many such patients continue to follow-up with specialists at a higher expense with no added benefit. We introduce a new term to describe this phenomenon: scope inversion, defined as the provision of primary care by specialist physicians. We aimed to quantify the extent of scope inversion by conducting a systematic review. MEDLINE and five other databases were searched using the keywords ‘specialist AND (routine OR primary) AND provi*’ as well as other variations. The search was limited to human research without restrictions on language or date of publication. The inclusion criterion was studies on rates of the provision of routine primary care by specialist physicians. Thirteen observational studies met the inclusion criteria. A wide range of primary care involvement was observed among specialists, from 2.6% to 65% of clinic visits. Among children, 41.3% of visits with specialists were routine follow-ups for conditions such as allergic rhinitis and seborrhoeic dermatitis which could be managed in primary care. Data quality was moderate to low across the studies due to limitations of source data and varying definitions of primary care. Specialist physicians provide primary care to patients in a substantial proportion of clinic visits. Scope inversion is wasteful as it diverts patients to more expensive care without improving outcomes. A systems approach is needed to mitigate scope inversion and its harmful effects on healthcare service delivery.
url https://fmch.bmj.com/content/8/1/e000247.full
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