GP access linked to less asthma emergency admissions

Practices where patients report relatively good access to GP services have fewer patients admitted to hospital for asthma attacks, a study by the British Journal of General Practice has found.

The study discovered that there is a statistically significant association between practices' overall composite score for access and emergency asthma admissions, to the extent that each 10 per cent increase in access score was linked to a 32 per cent reduction in admissions.

It argues that policymakers should consider improving access to primary care as one potential way to help prevent emergency hospital admissions for asthma.

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This story was first published in digitalhealth.net

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