Since its launch in 2004, the Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF) has been used as a pay-for-performance finance model, contributing up to 25% of a GP’s annual salary. The programme works by rewarding GPs for offering quality care services in over 100 individual treatment indictors. Almost all of the UK’s GP practices participate in the scheme.
Using information from the World Health Organisation’s mortality database, the research team – (a partnership between The Universities of Michigan, York and Manchester) was able to compare UK-based outcomes with those of 27 like-for-like countries including the USA, Australia, France, Germany and Sweden over a 17-year period.
By aggregating data from these statistically-similar countries, investigators were able to create a single weighted combination which allowed a more direct comparison. This so-called ‘synthetic UK’ permitted researchers to compare mortality data from specific disease areas, such as heart disease (which is heavily targeted by the QOF indicators) and cancer, to fully understand the impact of the programme. The team was also able to make an accumulated analysis which factored all of the QOF disease indicators into a single, overall evaluation.
Although the research team noted small mortality reductions for the direct comparison of QOF indicators the current pay-for-performance model was not associated overall with any significant changes in mortality.
Lead researcher at The University of Manchester’s £18 million Health eResearch Centre Dr Evan Kontopantelis said: “Our results clearly show that the Quality and Outcomes Framework is not significantly associated with changes in population mortality for the diseases that are targeted by the programme.