Determining the optimal model for role-substitution in NHS dental services in the United Kingdom

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Determining the optimal model for role-substitution in NHS dental services in the United Kingdom. / Brocklehurst, Paul; Birch, Stephen; McDonald, Ruth et al.
In: BMC Oral Health, Vol. 13, 24.09.2013, p. 46.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Brocklehurst, P, Birch, S, McDonald, R & Tickle, M 2013, 'Determining the optimal model for role-substitution in NHS dental services in the United Kingdom', BMC Oral Health, vol. 13, pp. 46. https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6831-13-46

APA

Brocklehurst, P., Birch, S., McDonald, R., & Tickle, M. (2013). Determining the optimal model for role-substitution in NHS dental services in the United Kingdom. BMC Oral Health, 13, 46. https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6831-13-46

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MLA

VancouverVancouver

Brocklehurst P, Birch S, McDonald R, Tickle M. Determining the optimal model for role-substitution in NHS dental services in the United Kingdom. BMC Oral Health. 2013 Sept 24;13:46. doi: 10.1186/1472-6831-13-46

Author

Brocklehurst, Paul ; Birch, Stephen ; McDonald, Ruth et al. / Determining the optimal model for role-substitution in NHS dental services in the United Kingdom. In: BMC Oral Health. 2013 ; Vol. 13. pp. 46.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Determining the optimal model for role-substitution in NHS dental services in the United Kingdom

AU - Brocklehurst, Paul

AU - Birch, Stephen

AU - McDonald, Ruth

AU - Tickle, Martin

PY - 2013/9/24

Y1 - 2013/9/24

N2 - BACKGROUND: Role-substitution describes a model of dental care where Dental Care Professionals (DCPs) provide some of the clinical activity previously undertaken by General Dental Practitioners. This has the potential to increase technical efficiency, the capacity to care and reduce costs. Technical efficiency is defined as the production of the maximum amount of output from a given amount of input so that the service operates at the production frontier i.e. optimal level of productivity. Academic research into technical efficiency is becoming increasingly utilised in health care, although no studies have investigated the efficiency of NHS dentistry or role-substitution in high-street dental practices. The aim of this study is to examine the barriers and enablers that exist for role-substitution in general dental practices in the NHS and to determine the most technically efficient model for role-substitution.METHODS/DESIGN: A screening questionnaire will be sent to DCPs to determine the type and location of role-substitutive models employed in NHS dental practices in the United Kingdom (UK). Semi-structured interviews will then be conducted with practice owners, DCPs and patients at selected sites identified by the questionnaire. Detail will be recorded about the organisational structure of the dental team, the number of NHS hours worked and the clinical activity undertaken. The interviews will continue until saturation and will record the views and attitudes of the members of the dental team. Final numbers of interviews will be determined by saturation.The second work-stream will examine the technical efficiency of the selected practices using Data Envelopment Analysis and Stochastic Frontier Modeling. The former is a non-parametric technique and is considered to be a highly flexible approach for applied health applications. The latter is parametric and is based on frontier regression models that estimate a conventional cost function.DISCUSSION: Maximising health for a given level and mix of resources is an ethical imperative for health service planners. This study will determine the technical efficiency of role-substitution and so address one of the key recommendations of the Independent Review of NHS dentistry in England.

AB - BACKGROUND: Role-substitution describes a model of dental care where Dental Care Professionals (DCPs) provide some of the clinical activity previously undertaken by General Dental Practitioners. This has the potential to increase technical efficiency, the capacity to care and reduce costs. Technical efficiency is defined as the production of the maximum amount of output from a given amount of input so that the service operates at the production frontier i.e. optimal level of productivity. Academic research into technical efficiency is becoming increasingly utilised in health care, although no studies have investigated the efficiency of NHS dentistry or role-substitution in high-street dental practices. The aim of this study is to examine the barriers and enablers that exist for role-substitution in general dental practices in the NHS and to determine the most technically efficient model for role-substitution.METHODS/DESIGN: A screening questionnaire will be sent to DCPs to determine the type and location of role-substitutive models employed in NHS dental practices in the United Kingdom (UK). Semi-structured interviews will then be conducted with practice owners, DCPs and patients at selected sites identified by the questionnaire. Detail will be recorded about the organisational structure of the dental team, the number of NHS hours worked and the clinical activity undertaken. The interviews will continue until saturation and will record the views and attitudes of the members of the dental team. Final numbers of interviews will be determined by saturation.The second work-stream will examine the technical efficiency of the selected practices using Data Envelopment Analysis and Stochastic Frontier Modeling. The former is a non-parametric technique and is considered to be a highly flexible approach for applied health applications. The latter is parametric and is based on frontier regression models that estimate a conventional cost function.DISCUSSION: Maximising health for a given level and mix of resources is an ethical imperative for health service planners. This study will determine the technical efficiency of role-substitution and so address one of the key recommendations of the Independent Review of NHS dentistry in England.

KW - Dental Health Services

KW - Efficiency, Organizational

KW - General Practice, Dental

KW - Great Britain

KW - Humans

KW - Models, Econometric

KW - Professional Role

KW - Prospective Payment System

KW - Regression Analysis

KW - State Dentistry

KW - Statistics, Nonparametric

KW - Journal Article

KW - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

U2 - 10.1186/1472-6831-13-46

DO - 10.1186/1472-6831-13-46

M3 - Article

C2 - 24063247

VL - 13

SP - 46

JO - BMC Oral Health

JF - BMC Oral Health

SN - 1472-6831

ER -