Background. The Health (Out-Patient Charges) Regulations 1994 were designed to encourage those Irish patients liable for their own health care costs to attend their GP before their local Accident and Emergency (A&E) department. Such patients are referred to as General Medical Services (GMS)-ineligible. Prior to the introduction of the regulations in March 1994, there was a perverse financial incentive for these patients to attend directly A&E departments instead of their GP. Objective. The aim was to compare the number of GMS-ineligible patients referred by a GP during the year before and the year after the implementation of the Regulations. Method. This study involved the audit of all new attendances to a large A&E department, for 1 year b...
This paper examines the determinants of general practitioner (GP) utilisation patterns in Ireland ov...
This paper examines the determinants of general practitioner (GP) utilisation patterns in Ireland ov...
Restricted access to primary care can lead to avoidable, excessive use of expensive emergency care. ...
Background. The Health (Out-Patient Charges) Regulations 1994 were designed to encourage those Irish...
In Ireland, approximately 30 per cent of the population (medical cardholders) receive free GP servic...
Media coverage of health care in Ireland tends to focus almost exclusively on hospital services, wai...
In Ireland, approximately 30 per cent of the population (“medical cardholders”) receive free GP serv...
We investigate whether the introduction of universal free General Practitioner (GP) care for childre...
Financial incentives in primary care have been often introduced with the purpose of improving approp...
This paper examines the determinants of general practitioner (GP) utilisation patterns in Ireland ov...
Background: A change in the pricing of general practitioner care in the Republic of Ireland in 2001 ...
approximately 30 per cent of the population (“medical cardholders”) receive free GP services while t...
In many health care systems generalist physicians act as gatekeepers to secondary care. Under the En...
In Ireland, approximately 30 per cent of the population (“medical cardholders”) receive free GP serv...
This paper examines the determinants of general practitioner (GP) utilisation patterns in Ireland ov...
This paper examines the determinants of general practitioner (GP) utilisation patterns in Ireland ov...
This paper examines the determinants of general practitioner (GP) utilisation patterns in Ireland ov...
Restricted access to primary care can lead to avoidable, excessive use of expensive emergency care. ...
Background. The Health (Out-Patient Charges) Regulations 1994 were designed to encourage those Irish...
In Ireland, approximately 30 per cent of the population (medical cardholders) receive free GP servic...
Media coverage of health care in Ireland tends to focus almost exclusively on hospital services, wai...
In Ireland, approximately 30 per cent of the population (“medical cardholders”) receive free GP serv...
We investigate whether the introduction of universal free General Practitioner (GP) care for childre...
Financial incentives in primary care have been often introduced with the purpose of improving approp...
This paper examines the determinants of general practitioner (GP) utilisation patterns in Ireland ov...
Background: A change in the pricing of general practitioner care in the Republic of Ireland in 2001 ...
approximately 30 per cent of the population (“medical cardholders”) receive free GP services while t...
In many health care systems generalist physicians act as gatekeepers to secondary care. Under the En...
In Ireland, approximately 30 per cent of the population (“medical cardholders”) receive free GP serv...
This paper examines the determinants of general practitioner (GP) utilisation patterns in Ireland ov...
This paper examines the determinants of general practitioner (GP) utilisation patterns in Ireland ov...
This paper examines the determinants of general practitioner (GP) utilisation patterns in Ireland ov...
Restricted access to primary care can lead to avoidable, excessive use of expensive emergency care. ...