Title: A commissioning taxonomy for the NHS in England
1A commissioning taxonomy for the NHS in England
- Judith Smith
- ESRC Managing Scarcity Seminar
- 1 December 2005
2This is the work of a team, funded by The Health
Foundation
- Judith Smith HSMC
- Nick Mays LSHTM
- Jennifer Dixon Kings Fund
- Nick Goodwin - LSHTM
- Richard Lewis Kings Fund
- Siobhan McClelland - Glamorgan
- Hugh McLeod - HSMC
- Sally Wyke - Stirling
3Overview
- Defining commissioning and primary care-led
commissioning - What we know from the evidence about PCLC
- Levels of commissioning the taxonomy
- Choosing the appropriate commissioning model
- Challenges ahead for NHS commissioning in England
4The NHS market and a purchaser-provider split
- The terms contracting, purchasing and
commissioning entered the NHS lexicon in the
late 1980s and the 1990s - A purchaser-provider split in an NHS market
- Designed to bring about competition between
providers, to bring down costs, and improve
quality and responsiveness - Health authorities and GP fundholders were the
two main routes for purchasing in 1991 - A population approach and a patient-focused one
(Ham, 1996)
5Commissioning
- Commissioning was the term used later in 1990s
for an arguably more sophisticated and strategic
activity - One that encompasses assessment of health needs,
buying services to meet those needs, and a range
of strategic efforts to improve health
(Ovretveit, 1995)
6Primary care-led commissioning
- Term emerged in mid-1990s
- Reflected the emergence of a range of
commissioning models that sought to involve GPs
in leadership, planning and decision-making about
use of resources - Encompassed fundholding, its alternatives and
extensions
7Defining primary care-led commissioning
- Commissioning led by primary health care
clinicians, particularly GPs, using their
accumulated knowledge of their patients needs
and of the performance of services, together with
their experience as agents for their patients and
control over resources (Smith et al, 2004)
8Why have (or reintroduce) primary care-led
commissioning?
- Rationale that, when given budgetary
responsibility, primary care providers (usually
GPs) are well placed to use knowledge of patients
and services to bring about improvements in
referred services - To enable more effective commissioning
- To develop stronger involvement of GPs in the
management of the health system - To enable better management of demand for care
- To capitalise on fact that incentives for GPs to
manage demand/scarcity are clearer than for PCTs
9What do we know about commissioning from the
research evidence?
- Little evidence that shows PCLC, or any other
approach, to have made a significant or strategic
impact on secondary care - PCLC, where clinicians have influence over
budgets, can improve responsiveness - PCLC has made most impact in primary and
intermediate care
10The evidence (2)
- Given a sustained opportunity to innovate, highly
determined primary care-led commissioners can
achieve innovation in the local health system - Primary care-led commissioning increases
transaction costs in commissioning
11The evidence (3)
- There is no ideal size for a commissioning
organisation - A single organisational solution is neither
appropriate nor possible - Meaningful clinical engagement is key
- But a balance to be struck with public and
management accountability - PCLC (and other commissioning) organisations have
struggled with public engagement
12The evidence (4)
- Adequate management support is vital and has a
relationship with outcomes - Timely and accurate information is crucial, and
routine data could be used much more - PCL commissioners need headroom to commission
according to local priorities - Relationships with providers need to avoid being
cosy contestable collaboration - A degree of stability of organisational
arrangements is needed
13A commissioning continuum
- No one element of commissioning should be
considered in isolation - All part of a continuum from which PCT/board
chooses according to local health needs and
service configuration - Challenge is how to select an appropriate mix of
commissioning approaches, and having a rigorous
process for this
14A continuum of commissioning models in the UK
Individual --- Practitioner --- Practice ---
Locality --- Community --- Region --- Nation
Primary Care Organisation /PCT commissioning
National commissioning
Multi-practice or locality commissioning
Patient Choice
Joint commissioning or health plan commissioning
Single practice-based commissioning
Lead PCT/LHB/HB commissioning
15Evaluating models of commissioning
- Analysis of the service to be commissioned.
Simple or complex? Level of information about the
service? Contestable or not? - Analysis of the context and environment. Choice
of providers or not? Patients willing and able
to travel? - Analysis of the model in relation to assessment
criteria
16Assessment criteria for models of commissioning
- Ability of the model to
- shape different types of services
- offer a degree of choice of provider,
contestability responsiveness - manage budgets and financial risk
- minimise transaction costs
- develop and sustain clinical engagement
- address health needs and tackle inequalities
- improve and govern clinical quality
17Challenges ahead for NHS commissioning in England
- Avoiding the temptation to try and find the
right size of commissioning organisation - Working out the relationships between
commissioning models - Determining the degree to which the private and
third sectors should be able to commission (NERA,
2005) - Finding the necessary skills and capacity to make
the commissioning system work - Governing the commissioning system
18The commissioning organisation of the future
- In a pluralist, yet publicly-financed system, we
need - Brain to determine priorities, overall resource
allocation, service design - Conscience to assure service quality, manage
and oversee contracting on behalf of PBCs, govern
conflicts on interest, secure public involvement,
assure probity - Smith and Mays (2005)
19References
- NERA Economic Consulting (2005) Commissioning in
the NHS challenges and opportunities - Ovretveit J (1995) Purchasing for health a
multi-disciplinary introduction to the theory and
practice of purchasing. Open University Press - Smith J and Mays N (2005) Primary care trusts do
they have a future? British Medical Journal 331
1156-7 - Smith J, Mays N et al (2004) A review of the
effectiveness of primary care-led commissioning
and its place in the NHS www.health.org.uk