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GPs urged to refer directly to the independent sector
Helen Mooney
Health Service Journal, 9 August

Western Cheshire primary care trust has told doctors across its 
patch to refer orthopaedic patients needing hip and knee 
replacements directly to an independent sector treatment centre 
because it is under-used.

A letter sent on 31 July to Western Cheshire GPs from PCT 
director of commissioning and health outcomes Graham Atkinson 
and chair of the professional executive committee John Hodgson 
asks GPs to refer directly to the Cheshire and Merseyside ISTC.

At present GPs in the area first have to refer orthopaedic 
patients to an orthopaedic triage service run by the PCT.

'The decision has been taken due to the scale of the treatment 
centre contract, which is currently being under-utilised,' the 
letter says.

'The PCT must pay for this activity whether or not it is used 
and, in 2007-08, the contract is worth £6.9m.'

GPs will be monitored at practice level on the number of 
referrals they make to the ISTC and will get a budget allocation 
for use of the centre as part of their indicative practice-based 
commissioning budget.

Western Cheshire PCT chief executive Helen Bellairs said the 
move was not trying to cut patient choice.

'On the contrary, we have merely stressed to GPs the importance 
of considering the ISTC as an option for patients. It is 
appropriate that we should utilise all of our contracts to 
ensure best value for money.'

She said use of the ISTC was shared between eight PCTs but that 
Western Cheshire had a 'larger than fair share of the contract'.

The centre, run by Interhealth Canada subsidiary Interhealth 
Care Services, is part of the government's wave one ISTC programme.

The Cheshire and Merseyside ISTC, which opened in June 2006, is 
worth £120m over five years. It is contracted for 5,000 
operations a year.

A second Interhealth ISTC worth £26m provides orthopaedic 
surgery at Kidderminster Hospital.

Janet Soo-Chung, chief executive of debt-ridden North Yorkshire 
and York PCT, also sent a letter to GPs last week encouraging 
them to take 'action to fully maximise' use of a York-based ISTC 
run by Capio Healthcare UK. This ISTC was also procured under 
the wave one scheme and Capio is paid regardless of the work the 
centre does.

The ISTC scheme has faced criticism from the NHS after it 
emerged private companies running centres are paid millions of 
pounds for five-year contracts whether or not they carry out work.

Wave one ISTC procurement has been dogged by under-use; in 2005 
HSJ revealed Greater Manchester surgical centre had lost the 
health economy nearly £2m in its first six months (news, page 7, 
15 December 2005).


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