BACKGROUND General practitioners' remuneration is now linked directly to the scores attained in the Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF). The success of this approach depends in part on designing a robust and clinically meaningful set of indicators. The aim of this study was to assess the extent to which measures of health observed in practice populations are correlated with their QOF scores, after accounting for the established associations between health outcomes and socio-demographics. METHODS QOF data for the period April 2004 to March 2005 were obtained for all general practices in two English Primary Care Trusts. These data were linked to data for emergency hospital admissions (for asthma, cancer, chronic obstructive pulmonary di...
PURPOSE Primary care practices in the United Kingdom have received substan-tial fi nancial rewards f...
Background: The incentivization of UK primary care through the Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF) ...
The Quality and Outcomes Framework has deeply divided UK general practitioners. I commend this book ...
Abstract Background General practitioners' remuneration is now linked directly to the scores attaine...
BACKGROUND General practitioners' remuneration is now linked directly to the scores attained in the...
Background: Introduced in 2004 as part of a new contract for General Practitioners in the National H...
AbstractObjectivesAdjustment for morbidity is important to ensure fair comparison of outcomes betwee...
This paper explains the reasons and context behind the introduction of the Quality and Outcomes Fram...
Background: The government set a series of targets to reduce health inequalities in England by 2010....
Pay-for-performance models have been introduced in many systems to incentivize improvements in effic...
Pay-for-performance models have been introduced in many systems to incentivize improvements in effic...
Contains fulltext : 88441.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)This paper exp...
Background A new contract between UK primary care practices and government was implemented in April ...
Background: Introduced in 2004 in the UK National Health Service and costing approximately £1billion...
BACKGROUND: The Quality and Outcomes Framework, a financial incentive scheme for general practitione...
PURPOSE Primary care practices in the United Kingdom have received substan-tial fi nancial rewards f...
Background: The incentivization of UK primary care through the Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF) ...
The Quality and Outcomes Framework has deeply divided UK general practitioners. I commend this book ...
Abstract Background General practitioners' remuneration is now linked directly to the scores attaine...
BACKGROUND General practitioners' remuneration is now linked directly to the scores attained in the...
Background: Introduced in 2004 as part of a new contract for General Practitioners in the National H...
AbstractObjectivesAdjustment for morbidity is important to ensure fair comparison of outcomes betwee...
This paper explains the reasons and context behind the introduction of the Quality and Outcomes Fram...
Background: The government set a series of targets to reduce health inequalities in England by 2010....
Pay-for-performance models have been introduced in many systems to incentivize improvements in effic...
Pay-for-performance models have been introduced in many systems to incentivize improvements in effic...
Contains fulltext : 88441.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)This paper exp...
Background A new contract between UK primary care practices and government was implemented in April ...
Background: Introduced in 2004 in the UK National Health Service and costing approximately £1billion...
BACKGROUND: The Quality and Outcomes Framework, a financial incentive scheme for general practitione...
PURPOSE Primary care practices in the United Kingdom have received substan-tial fi nancial rewards f...
Background: The incentivization of UK primary care through the Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF) ...
The Quality and Outcomes Framework has deeply divided UK general practitioners. I commend this book ...