Primary care consultation length by deprivation and multimorbidity in England

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Abstract

Background Longer GP consultations are recommended as one way of improving care for people with multimorbidity. In Scotland, multimorbid patients in deprived areas do not have had longer consultations though their counterparts in the least deprived areas do. This example of the inverse care law has not been examined in England. Aim To assess GP consultation length by socioeconomic deprivation and multimorbidity. Design and Setting Random sample of 1.2 million consultations from 1 st April 2014-31 st March 2016 for 185,755 adults in England drawn from the Clinical Practice Research Datalink. Method Consultation duration was derived from time of opening and closing the patient’s electronic record. Mean duration was estimated by multimorbidity level and type, adjusted for number of consultations and other patient and staff characteristics and patient and practice random effects. Results Consultations lasted 10.9 minutes and mean duration increased with number of conditions. Patients with 6+ conditions had 0.9 (95% CI 0.8, 1.0) minutes longer than those with none. Patients with both mental and physical health condition had 0.5 (95% CI 0.4, 0.5) minutes longer than non-multimorbid patients. However, consultations were 0.5 (95% CI 0.4, 0.5) minutes shorter in the most compared with the least deprived fifth of areas at all levels of multimorbidity. Conclusion GPs in England spend longer with patients who have more conditions but at all multimorbidity levels, those in deprived areas have less time per GP consultation. Research is needed to assess the impact of consultation length on patient and system outcomes for people with multimorbidity.

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