Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byJeffery Ross Modified over 9 years ago
1
1 Quantifying inequities for a commissioning strategy: the example of Luton tPCT Paul Brotherton, for Luton tPCT June 2007
2
2 Overview Context Background Luton’s strategic approach Forecasting Example – CVD Comments
3
3 Context Population 190,000 33% from black and minority ethnic groups 50% of school children from BME groups Largest BME groups: Pakistani, Irish, Black Caribbean, Bangladeshi, Indian, Black African. SMR (all ages all causes): 111. High activity levels for emergency admissions and low level for electives.
4
4 Background to the strategy Various strategies and partnership plans in place, but not an overarching plan Annual planning cycle Needed to communicate an overall vision NHS generally poor at modelling and forecasting activity
5
5 Luton’s strategic approach Vision & values and strategic objectives Priorities for action (phased) Population, activity, forecasts and costs over three years Detailed delivery plan for each priority topic
6
6 Strategic approach - impact of equalities data Choice of strategic objectives Choice of priority topics (eg CVD, diabetes, HIV, perinatal mortality) Activity and cost forecasts Detailed delivery plans
7
7 Forecasting demand for health care Some key factors: Key determinants - economic - environment - education - lifestyle etc Demography - age - sex - ethnicity Incidence and prevalence Primary care Pharmacy NHS Direct 999 A&E Health seeking behaviour, expectations, etc Supply, information & advice, accessibility, cost, eligibility Care at home Propensity to refer; admission thresholds Capacity; targets; tertiary referrals; Hospital and community- based secondary care ACTION: Joint action on wider determinants of health; public health interventions; health protection measures; demand management; control of supply/market management; practice based commissioning; national guidelines eg NICE & DH imperatives; incentives; local guidelines & pathways; redesign; efficiency; new technology; NHS reforms; reconfiguration;
8
8 Forecasting – assumptions made for: Population change (size, age, ethnicity) Shift from hospital to primary care Increased emergency admissions Increases related to specific local health needs (CVD, diabetes, HIV, low birthweight and PMR) Elective and non-elective inpatients, new outpatients, total outpatients
9
9 Example - CVD SMR for all circulatory diseases (age under 75): 113 Higher prevalence in some key local groups (Irish, Pakistani, Indian males; Irish and Black Caribbean females) Forecast 12.5% increase in number with CVD in Luton 2006-2010 Assumption: 1.75% pa activity rise
10
10 Stop smoking service – equity audit 40% of Bangladeshi males are smokers (2004 Health Survey) 4.1% of Luton population are Bangladeshi Only 1.1% of level 2 stop smoking service users are Bangladeshi. Targeted action to reduce inequity
11
11 Benefits of using ethnic group data Breaking activity and cost into smaller populations allows more detailed assumptions and forecasts Can measure equity of service use Can tailor interventions to specific groups Can measure the success of those interventions.
12
12 Comment (1) Can make more use of data available Eg could benchmark activity by ethnic group (eg care and resource utilisation) Forecasting needn’t be sophisticated – make assumptions explicit and review regularly
13
13 Comment (2) Ethnicity data/segmenting the population should improve planning and thus help meet overall objectives. Ethnic monitoring needs to keep up with the times (eg Eastern Europe) Primary care data is the missing link.
14
14 Acknowledgements/ contacts Luton tPCT information analysts: Kanan Kannan Louise Choo 01582 528840 or: paul@paulbrothertonconsulting.org
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.