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Research

The epidemiology of teaching and training General Practices in England

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Pages 462-470 | Received 02 Feb 2016, Accepted 29 Jun 2016, Published online: 18 Jul 2016
 

Abstract

There is no national picture of teaching and training practices or the communities they serve. We aimed to describe the association between general practices’ engagement with education and their characteristics, locality and patients’ health-status and satisfaction. This data linkage study of all English practices calculated odds ratios for teaching and training status and practice, locality and patient variables. Teaching and training practices are larger than practices which do neither (mean list size (SD) 7074 (3736), 10112 (4934), and 5327 (3368) respectively, p < 0.001 and have fewer patients per GP (1932 (951), 1838 (544), and 2117 (1585) respectively, p < 0.001). Their localities have a higher proportion of White British residents (77.99% (24.17), 81.66% (20.81), 73.07% (26.91), p < 0.001). Practices with more GPs (OR 1.21 (95%CI 1.18–1.20)), fewer male GPs (0.45 (0.36–0.55)) and a higher proportion of White British people in their locality (1.30 (1.06–1.60)) were more likely to teach. Practices in rural areas (1.68 (1.43–1.98)), with more GPs (1.22 (1.27–1.39)), more full time equivalent GPs (2.68 (1.64–4.40)), fewer male GPs (0.17 (0.13–0.22)) and a higher proportion of White British people in their locality (1.34 (1.02–1.75)) were more likely to train. Teaching and training practices had higher patient satisfaction (0.293 (0.190, 0.397) and (0.563 (0.442, 0.685)) respectively and quality and outcomes framework scores (0.507 (0.211, 0.804)) and (0.996 (0.650, 1.342)) respectively than those which did not. Educationally engaged practices are unrepresentative in serving less ethnically diverse and (for training practices) less urban environments. Investment is needed to increase the proportion of educational practices in diverse urban localities.

Acknowledgements

Helen Derbyshire collated the undergraduate teaching database, SAPC Heads of Teaching contributed their data, Paul Bassett from Statsconsultancy Ltd advised on the analysis as a paid consultancy and we would like to thank the members of the Medical Education Research Group at Keele who acted as critical friends during the preparation of this paper.

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