![]() |
|
|||||||
| Finding Your People - Special Groups Are you a member of AA? Neurodiverse? a Vegan? Find your people here! |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|
#11 | |
|
Senior Member
How Do You Identify?:
pervert butch feminist woman Preferred Pronoun?:
see above Relationship Status:
independent entity Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Oakland
Posts: 1,826
Thanks: 4,068
Thanked 7,654 Times in 1,523 Posts
Rep Power: 21474853 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Quote:
http://www.bma.org.uk/press_centre/p...p#.T2jtiBHy_Qg How general practice is funded Almost all funding in the current contract is practice-based. This means that payments are made to the practice and not to individual GPs. Expenses - for example, rent, utility bills and staff wages - are taken out of this funding pot and the amount remaining, after the cost of providing clinical services has been taken out, makes up the pay available to the GP partners. The funding formula is extremely complex and funding is distributed to practices according to the weighted needs of their population - for example a practice with a large elderly population, and therefore a greater workload, will get more funding than a practice with a relatively young, healthy population. GP practices receive their funding through several major streams, though the main ones are the Global Sum, the Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF), and Enhanced Services: Here is an abstract from Health Affairs (www.healthaffairs.org) Quality Incentives: The Case Of U.K. General Practitioners Peter C. Smith and Nick York Abstract The United Kingdom is implementing major changes to the national contract for general practitioners (GPs). A central plank of the new arrangements is an ambitious scheme to reward high-quality care. Each general practice will be scored on 146 performance indicators according to the measured quality of care it delivers, and its accumulated score will determine the magnitude of the quality payment it receives. About 18 percent of practice earnings will be at risk. This paper describes the incentive scheme, discusses its potential benefits and risks, and draws out the implications for evaluation. One of the things that has happened under this new contract is the significantly increased number of folks being diagnosed with diabetes. It has been written up in several medical journals. It is my understanding that New Zealand has a two-tiered payment system, although I have not done recent research on their system. (I lived in NZ in early 2000 and received health care there...) There are plenty of inaccuracies about how nationalized health care works in other countries being said in the US. I just hate seeing more put out there.
__________________
We are everywhere We are different I do not care if resistance is futile I will not assimilate |
|
|
|
|
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|