Jennie Corbett
RAND Corporation
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Featured researches published by Jennie Corbett.
BMJ | 2017
Jennifer Newbould; Gary A. Abel; Sarah Ball; Jennie Corbett; Marc N. Elliott; Josephine Exley; Adam Martin; Catherine L. Saunders; Edward O. Wilson; Eleanor Winpenny; Miaoqing Yang; Martin Roland
Objective To evaluate a “telephone first” approach, in which all patients wanting to see a general practitioner (GP) are asked to speak to a GP on the phone before being given an appointment for a face to face consultation. Design Time series and cross sectional analysis of routine healthcare data, data from national surveys, and primary survey data. Participants 147 general practices adopting the telephone first approach compared with a 10% random sample of other practices in England. Intervention Management support for workload planning and introduction of the telephone first approach provided by two commercial companies. Main outcome measures Number of consultations, total time consulting (59 telephone first practices, no controls). Patient experience (GP Patient Survey, telephone first practices plus controls). Use and costs of secondary care (hospital episode statistics, telephone first practices plus controls). The main analysis was intention to treat, with sensitivity analyses restricted to practices thought to be closely following the companies’ protocols. Results After the introduction of the telephone first approach, face to face consultations decreased considerably (adjusted change within practices −38%, 95% confidence interval −45% to −29%; P<0.001). An average practice experienced a 12-fold increase in telephone consultations (1204%, 633% to 2290%; P<0.001). The average duration of both telephone and face to face consultations decreased, but there was an overall increase of 8% in the mean time spent consulting by GPs, albeit with large uncertainty on this estimate (95% confidence interval −1% to 17%; P=0.088). These average workload figures mask wide variation between practices, with some practices experiencing a substantial reduction in workload and others a large increase. Compared with other English practices in the national GP Patient Survey, in practices using the telephone first approach there was a large (20.0 percentage points, 95% confidence interval 18.2 to 21.9; P<0.001) improvement in length of time to be seen. In contrast, other scores on the GP Patient Survey were slightly more negative. Introduction of the telephone first approach was followed by a small (2.0%) increase in hospital admissions (95% confidence interval 1% to 3%; P=0.006), no initial change in emergency department attendance, but a small (2% per year) decrease in the subsequent rate of rise of emergency department attendance (1% to 3%; P=0.005). There was a small net increase in secondary care costs. Conclusions The telephone first approach shows that many problems in general practice can be dealt with over the phone. The approach does not suit all patients or practices and is not a panacea for meeting demand. There was no evidence to support claims that the approach would, on average, save costs or reduce use of secondary care.
International Journal of Integrated Care | 2016
Eleanor Winpenny; Jennie Corbett; Celine Miani; Sarah King; Emma Pitchforth; Tom Ling; Edwin van Teijlingen; Ellen Nolte
Background: There is no single definition of a community hospital in the UK, despite its long history. We sought to understand the nature and scope of service provision in community hospitals, within the UK and other high-income countries. Methods: We undertook a scoping review of literature on community hospitals published from 2005 to 2014. Data were extracted on features of the hospital model and the services provided, with results presented as a narrative synthesis. Results: 75 studies were included from ten countries. Community hospitals provide a wide range of services, with wide diversity of provision appearing to reflect local needs. Community hospitals are staffed by a mixture of general practitioners (GPs), nurses, allied health professionals and healthcare assistants. We found many examples of collaborative working arrangements between community hospitals and other health care organisations, including colocation of services, shared workforce with primary care and close collaboration with acute specialists. Conclusions: Community hospitals are able to provide a diverse range of services, responding to geographical and health system contexts. Their collaborative nature may be particularly important in the design of future models of care delivery, where emphasis is placed on integration of care with a key focus on patient-centred care.
Archive | 2017
Jenny Newbould; Gary A. Abel; Simon Ball; Jennie Corbett; Marc N. Elliott; Josephine Exley; Adam Martin; Catherine L. Saunders; E Wilson; Eleanor Winpenny; Miaoqing Yang; Martin Roland
The study was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (HS&DR Project 13/59/40).
Archive | 2016
Shelly Culbertson; Tom Ling; Marie-Louise Henham; Jennie Corbett; Rita Karam; Paulina Pankowska; Catherine L. Saunders; Jacopo Bellasio; Ben Baruch
RANDs evaluation of Jordans Emergency Education Response Programme for Syrian refugee children identified significant successes and longer-term challenges. Key recommendations related to developing medium-term thinking and targeting gendered needs.
Archive | 2014
Ellen Nolte; Jennie Corbett
European Journal of Public Health | 2018
Teresa J. Mossakowska; Catherine L. Saunders; Jennie Corbett; Calum MacLure; Eleanor Winpenny; Elma Dujso; Rupert Payne
Archive | 2017
Jennie Corbett; Camilla d'Angelo; Lorenzo Gangitano; Jon Freeman
Health Services and Delivery Research | 2017
Emma Pitchforth; Ellen Nolte; Jennie Corbett; Celine Miani; Eleanor Winpenny; Edwin van Teijlingen; Natasha L. Elmore; Sarah King; Sarah Ball; Joanna Miler; Tom Ling
Archive | 2016
Shelly Culbertson; Tom Ling; Marie-Louise Henham; Jennie Corbett; Rita Karam; Paulina Pankowska; Catherine L. Saunders; Jacopo Bellasio; Ben Baruch
Archive | 2014
Ellen Nolte; Jennie Corbett