Impact of financial incentives on clinical autonomy and internal motivation in primary care: ethnographic study

Objective To explore the impact of financial incentives for quality of care on practice organisation, clinical autonomy, and internal motivation of doctors and nurses working in primary care. Design Ethnographic case study. Setting Two English general practices. Participants 12 general practitioners, nine nurses, four healthcare assistants, and four administrative staff. Main outcome measure Observation of practices over a five month period after the introduction of financial incentives for quality of care introduced in the 2004 general practitioner contract. Results After the introduction of the quality and outcomes framework there was an increase in the use of templates to collect data on quality of care. New regimens of surveillance were adopted, with clinicians seen as “chasers” or the “chased,” depending on their individual responsibility for delivering quality targets. Attitudes towards the contract were largely positive, although discontent was higher in the practice with a more intensive surveillance regimen. Nurses expressed more concern than doctors about changes to their clinical practice but also appreciated being given responsibility for delivering on targets in particular disease areas. Most doctors did not question the quality targets that existed at the time or the implications of the targets for their own clinical autonomy. Conclusions Implementation of financial incentives for quality of care did not seem to have damaged the internal motivation of the general practitioners studied, although more concern was expressed by nurses.

[1]  D. Tindall,et al.  Mechanisms of androgen-refractory prostate cancer. , 2004, The New England journal of medicine.

[2]  E. Deci,et al.  Self‐determination theory and work motivation , 2005 .

[3]  Carl May,et al.  Transforming general practice: the redistribution of medical work in primary care. , 2003, Sociology of health & illness.

[4]  S. Mercer,et al.  Ellipsis marks an important omission , 2007, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[5]  J. Rodriguez,et al.  Commentary: Generalisability and validity in qualitative research , 1999 .

[6]  Woodruff English,et al.  Rewarding Provider Performance: Aligning Incentives in Medicare , 2008, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[7]  David Reeves,et al.  Improvements in quality of clinical care in English general practice 1998-2003: longitudinal observational study , 2005, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[8]  A. Chapple,et al.  What makes British general practitioners take part in a quality improvement scheme? , 2001, Journal of health services research & policy.

[9]  S. Harrison New Labour, Modernisation and the Medical Labour Process , 2002, Journal of Social Policy.

[10]  Improving the quality of care through clinical governance , 2001, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[11]  R. Sheaff,et al.  Is GP Restratification Beginning in England , 2002 .

[12]  K. Miller,et al.  Intrinsic Motivation and Self-Determination in Human Behavior , 1975, Perspectives in Social Psychology.

[13]  Bengt Holmstrom,et al.  Moral Hazard in Teams , 1982 .

[14]  Grahame F. Thompson,et al.  Links between Governance, Incentives and Outcomes: a Review of the Literature , 2005 .

[15]  M. Marshall,et al.  It’s about more than money: financial incentives and internal motivation , 2005, Quality and Safety in Health Care.

[16]  B Sibbald,et al.  A subtle governance: 'soft' medical leadership in English primary care. , 2003, Sociology of health & illness.

[17]  J. Christianson,et al.  Physician pay-for-performance. Implementation and research issues. , 2006, Journal of general internal medicine.

[18]  Stephen Campbell,et al.  Financial incentives to improve the quality of primary care in the UK: predicting the consequences of change , 2006, Primary Health Care Research & Development.

[19]  J. Knottnerus,et al.  Doctor performance and public accountability , 2003, The Lancet.

[20]  E. Deci,et al.  A meta-analytic review of experiments examining the effects of extrinsic rewards on intrinsic motivation. , 1999, Psychological bulletin.

[21]  S. Harrison,et al.  Autonomy and bureaucratic accountability in primary care: what English general practitioners say , 2002 .

[22]  Edward L. Deci,et al.  Intrinsic Motivation and Self-Determination in Human Behavior , 1975, Perspectives in Social Psychology.

[23]  Evangelos Kontopantelis,et al.  Pay-for-performance programs in family practices in the United Kingdom. , 2006, The New England journal of medicine.

[24]  Martin Roland,et al.  Linking physicians' pay to the quality of care--a major experiment in the United kingdom. , 2004, The New England journal of medicine.