RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Capturing complexity in clinician case-mix: classification system development using GP and physician associate data JF BJGP Open JO BJGP Open FD Royal College of General Practitioners SP bjgpopen18X101277 DO 10.3399/bjgpopen18X101277 VO 2 IS 1 A1 Halter, Mary A1 Joly, Louise A1 de Lusignan, Simon A1 Grant, Robert L A1 Gage, Heather A1 Drennan, Vari M YR 2018 UL http://bjgpopen.org/content/2/1/bjgpopen18X101277.abstract AB Background There are limited case-mix classification systems for primary care settings which are applicable when considering the optimal clinical skill mix to provide services.Aim To develop a case-mix classification system (CMCS) and test its impact on analyses of patient outcomes by clinician type, using example data from physician associates’ (PAs) and GPs' consultations with same-day appointment patients.Design & setting Secondary analysis of controlled observational data from six general practices employing PAs and six matched practices not employing PAs in England.Method Routinely-collected patient consultation records (PA n = 932, GP n = 1154) were used to design the CMCS (combining problem codes, disease register data, and free text); to describe the case-mix; and to assess impact of statistical adjustment for the CMCS on comparison of outcomes of consultations with PAs and with GPs.Results A CMCS was developed by extending a system that only classified 18.6% (213/1147) of the presenting problems in this study's data. The CMCS differentiated the presenting patient’s level of need or complexity as: acute, chronic, minor problem or symptom, prevention, or process of care, applied hierarchically. Combination of patient and consultation-level measures resulted in a higher classification of acuity and complexity for 639 (30.6%) of patient cases in this sample than if using consultation level alone. The CMCS was a key adjustment in modelling the study’s main outcome measure, that is rate of repeat consultation.Conclusion This CMCS assisted in classifying the differences in case-mix between professions, thereby allowing fairer assessment of the potential for role substitution and task shifting in primary care, but it requires further validation.