CVD: Primary Care Intelligence
Packs
June 2017
Version 1
NHS East Leicestershire and
Rutland CCG
Contents 1. Introduction 3
2. CVD prevention
• The narrative 11
• The data 13
3. Hypertension
• The narrative 16
• The data 17
4. Stroke
• The narrative 27
• The data 28
5. Diabetes
• The narrative 42
• The data 43
6. Kidney
• The narrative 53
• The data 54
7. Heart
• The narrative 65
• The data 66
8. Outcomes 82
9. Appendix 88
2
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CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
3
Introduction
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
4
This intelligence pack has been compiled by GPs and nurses and pharmacists in
the Primary Care CVD Leadership Forum in collaboration with the National
Cardiovascular Intelligence Network
Matt Kearney Sarit Ghosh Kathryn Griffith
George Kassianos Jo Whitmore Matthew Fay
Chris Harris Jan Procter-King Yassir Javaid
Ivan Benett Ruth Chambers Ahmet Fuat
Mike Kirby Peter Green Kamlesh Khunti
Helen Williams Quincy Chuhka Sheila McCorkindale
Nigel Rowell Ali Morgan Stephen Kirk
Sally Christie Clare Hawley Paul Wright
Bruce Taylor Mike Knapton John Robson
Richard Mendelsohn Chris Arden David Fitzmaurice
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
Local intelligence as a tool for clinicians and commissioners
to improve outcomes for our patients
Why should we use this CVD Intelligence Pack
The high risk conditions for cardiovascular disease (CVD) - such as hypertension, atrial fibrillation, high cholesterol,
diabetes, non-diabetic hyperglycaemia and chronic kidney disease - are the low hanging fruit for prevention in the NHS
because in each case late diagnosis and suboptimal treatment is common and there is substantial variation. High
quality primary care is central to improving outcomes in CVD because primary care is where much prevention and
most diagnosis and treatment is delivered.
This cardiovascular intelligence pack is a powerful resource for stimulating local conversations about quality
improvement in primary care. Across a number of vascular conditions, looking at prevention, diagnosis, care and
outcomes, the data allows comparison between clinical commissioning groups (CCGs) and between practices.
This is not about performance management because we know that variation can have more than one interpretation.
But patients have a right to expect that we will ask challenging questions about how the best practices are achieving
the best, what average or below average performers could do differently, and how they could be supported to perform
as well as the best.
How to use the CVD intelligence pack
The intelligence pack has several sections – CVD prevention, hypertension, stroke and atrial fibrillation (AF), diabetes,
kidney disease, heart disease and heart failure. Each section has one slide of narrative that makes the case and asks
some questions. This is followed by data for a number of indicators, each with benchmarked comparison between
CCGs and between practices.
Use the pack to identify where there is variation that needs exploring and to start asking challenging questions about
where and how quality could be improved. We suggest you then develop a local action plan for quality improvement –
this might include establishing communities of practice to build clinical leadership, systematic local audit to get a better
understanding of the gaps in care and outcomes, and developing new models of care that mobilise the wider primary
care team to reduce burden on general practice.
5 CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
6
Data and methods
This slide pack compares the clinical commissioning group (CCG) with CCGs in its strategic transformation plan (STP) and
England. Where a CCG is in more than one STP, it has been allocated to the STP with the greatest geographical or
population coverage. The slide pack also compares the CCG to its 10 most similar CCGs in terms of demography, ethnicity
and deprivation. For information on the methodology used to calculate the 10 most similar CCGs please go to:
http://www.england.nhs.uk/resources/resources-for-ccgs/comm-for-value/
The 10 most similar CCGs to NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG are:
NHS Mid Essex CCG
NHS South Worcestershire CCG
NHS Guildford and Waverley CCG
NHS Horsham and Mid Sussex CCG
NHS South Warwickshire CCG
NHS North Somerset CCG
NHS Wiltshire CCG
NHS Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG
NHS South Norfolk CCG
NHS Surrey Downs CCG
The majority of data used in the packs is taken from the 2015/16 Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF). Where this is
not the case, this is indicated in the slide. All GP practices that were included in the 2015/16 QOF are included. Full
source data are shown in the appendix.
For the majority of indicators, the additional number of people that would be treated if all practices were to achieve as well
as the average of the top achieving practices is calculated. This is calculated by taking an average of the intervention rates
(ie the denominator includes exceptions) for the best 50% of practices in the CCG and applying this rate to all practices in
the CCG. Note, this number is not intended to be proof of a realisable improvement; rather it gives an indication of the
magnitude of available opportunity.
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
Benchmarking is helpful because it highlights
variation.
Of course it has long been acknowledged that some
variation is inevitable in the healthcare and outcomes
experienced by patients.
But John Wennberg, who has championed research
into clinical variation over four decades and who
founded the pioneering Dartmouth Atlas of Health
Care, concluded that much variation is unwarranted –
ie it cannot be explained on the basis of illness,
medical evidence, or patient preference, but is
accounted for by the willingness and ability of doctors
to offer treatment.
Benchmarking may not be conclusive. Its strength lies not in
the answers it provides but in the questions it generates for
CCGs and practices.
For example:
1. How much variation is there in detection, management,
exception reporting and outcomes?
2. How many people would benefit if average performers
improved to the level of the best performers?
3. How many people would benefit if the lowest performers
matched the achievement of the average?
4. What are better performers doing differently in the way
they provide services in order to achieve better outcomes?
5. How can the CCG support low and average performers to
help them match the achievement of the best?
6. How can we build clinical leadership to drive quality
improvement?
A key observation about benchmarking data is
that it does not tell us why there is variation. Some of the
variation may be explained by population or case mix and
some may be unwarranted. We will not know unless we
investigate.
The variation that exists between
demographically similar CCGs and
between practices illustrates the local
potential to improve care and outcomes
for our patients
There are legitimate reasons for exception reporting. But …….
Excepting patients from indicators puts them at risk of not receiving optimal care and of having worse outcomes. It is also
likely to increase health inequalities. The substantial variation seen in exception reporting for some indicators suggests
that some practices are more effective than others at reaching their whole population. Benchmarking exception reporting
allows us to identify the practices that need support to implement the strategies adopted by low excepting practices.
Why does variation matter?
7
Cluster methodology: your most similar practices
Each practice has been grouped on the basis of demographic data into
15 national clusters. These demographic factors cover:
• deprivation (practice level)
• age profile (% < 5, % < 18, % 15-24, % 65+, % 75+, % 85+)
• ethnicity (% population of white ethnicity)
• practice population side
These demographic factors closely align with those used to calculate
the “Similar 10 CCGs”.
These demographic factors have been used to compare practices with
similar populations to account for potential factors which may drive
variation. Some local interpretation will need to be applied to the data
contained within the packs as practices with significant outlying
population characteristics e.g. university populations or care home
practices will need further contextualisation.
Further detailed information including full technical methodology and a
full PDF report on each of the 15 practice clusters is available here:
https://github.com/julianflowers/geopractice.
8 CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
7
9
22
21
17
31
14
15
12
9
3
5
1
1
1
-20%-15%-10%-5%0%5%
WELLINGTON ROAD SURGERY
EMERSONS GREEN MEDICAL CENTRE
LEAP VALLEY MEDICAL CENTRE
CHRISTCHURCH FAMILY MEDICAL CENTRE
CONISTON MEDICAL PRACTICE
FROME VALLEY MEDICAL CENTRE
ST MARY STREET SURGERY
KINGSWOOD HEALTH CENTRE
CONCORD MEDICAL CENTRE
KENNEDY WAY SURGERY
BRADLEY STOKE SURGERY
THE WILLOW SURGERY
CLOSE FARM SURGERY
PILNING SURGERY
COURTSIDE SURGERY
ALMONDSBURY SURGERY
STOKE GIFFORD MEDICAL CENTRE
ORCHARD MEDICAL CENTRE
WEST WALK SURGERY
THORNBURY HEALTH CENTRE - BURNEY
The performance of every practice in the GP cluster contributes to the average of the top performing
50% of practices to form a benchmark.
The difference between the benchmark and the selected practices is displayed on this chart. The benchmark will
most likely be different for different practices as they are in different clusters, so the difference is the key measure
here. If the practice performance is below the benchmark, the difference is applied to the denominator plus
exceptions to demonstrate potential gains on a practice basis. The potential gains on a CCG basis are calculated
based on the difference between the top 5 performing closest CCGs and the selected CCG, applied to the
denominator plus exceptions.
Cluster methodology: calculating potential gains
Raw difference between the
practice value
and the average of the
highest or lowest 50% of
similar cluster practices
Potential opportunity if
the practice value was
to move to the average
of the highest 50% of
similar cluster practices
Potential opportunity if the
CCG value were to move
to the average of the top 5
performing closest CCGs
9 CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
CVD prevention
10 CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
CVD prevention “The NHS needs a radical upgrade
in prevention if it is to be
sustainable”
5 year Forward View 2014
The size of the prevention problem
• 2/3 of adults are obese or overweight
• 1/3 of adults are physically inactive
• average smoking prevalence is 17% but is much
higher in some communities
• in high risk conditions like atrial fibrillation, high blood
pressure, diabetes and high ten year CVD risk score,
up to half of all people do not receive preventive
treatments that are known to be highly effective at
preventing heart attacks and strokes
• around 90% of people with familial hypercholestero-
laemia are undiagnosed and untreated despite their
average 10 year reduction in life expectancy
This is because England faces an epidemic of largely
preventable non-communicable diseases, such as heart
disease and stroke, cancer, Type 2 diabetes and liver disease.
The Global Burden of Disease Study (next slide) shows us that
the leading causes of premature mortality include diet,
tobacco, obesity, raised blood pressure, physical inactivity and
raised cholesterol. The radical upgrade in prevention needs
population-level approaches. But it also needs interventions in
primary care for individuals with behavioural and clinical risk
factors.
0% 1% 2% 3% 4% 5% 6% 7% 8% 9% 10% 11% 12%
Unsafe water/ sanitation/ handwashing
Unsafe sex
Other environmental risks
Sexual abuse and violence
Child and maternal malnutrition
Low bone mineral density
Air pollution
Occupational risks
Low physical activity
Low glomerular filtration rate
High total cholesterol
High fasting plasma glucose
Alcohol and drug use
High systolic blood pressure
High body-mass index
Tobacco smoke
Dietary risks
HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis
Diarrhea, lower respiratory & other common infectious diseases
Neglected tropical diseases & malaria
Maternal disorders
Neonatal disorders
Nutritional deficiencies
Other communicable, maternal, neonatal, & nutritional diseases
Neoplasms
Cardiovascular diseases
Chronic respiratory diseases
Cirrhosis
Digestive diseases
Neurological disorders
Mental & substance use disorders
Diabetes, urogenital, blood, & endocrine diseases
Musculoskeletal disorders
Other non-communicable diseases
Transport injuries
Unintentional injuries
Self-harm and interpersonal violence
Forces of nature, war, & legal intervention
Percent of total disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs)
Social prescribing and wellbeing hubs offer new
models for supporting behaviour change while reducing
burden on general practice.
The NHS Health Check is a systematic approach to
identifying local people at high risk of CVD, offering
behaviour change support and early detection of the
high risk but often undiagnosed conditions such as
hypertension, atrial fibrillation, CKD, diabetes and pre-
diabetes.
Question: What proportion of our local eligible
population is receiving the NHS Health Check and how
effective is the follow-up management of their clinical
risk factors in primary care?
11 11 CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
Global Burden of Disease Study 2015
Risk Factors for premature death and disability caused by CVD in England, expressed as a percentage of total disability-adjusted life-years
0% 1% 2% 3% 4% 5% 6% 7% 8% 9% 10%
Other environmental risks
Low glomerular filtration rate
Air pollution
Low physical activity
High fasting plasma glucose
Tobacco smoke
High body-mass index
High total cholesterol
Dietary risks
High systolic blood pressure
Percentage of total CVD disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs)
12 CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
12.4%
12.4%
12.6%
14.2%
14.4%
15.3%
15.7%
16.4%
16.4%
16.7%
16.8%
0% 2% 4% 6% 8% 10% 12% 14% 16% 18%
NHS Surrey Downs CCG
NHS Horsham and Mid Sussex CCG
NHS Guildford and Waverley CCG
NHS South Warwickshire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
NHS Wiltshire CCG
NHS Mid Essex CCG
NHS South Norfolk CCG
NHS North Somerset CCG
NHS South Worcestershire CCG
NHS Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG
13
Estimated smoking prevalence (QOF) by CCG
Comparison with demographically similar CCGs
Note: It has been found that the proportion of
patients recorded as smokers correlates well
with IHS smoking prevalence and is a good
estimate of the actual smoking prevalence in
local areas,
http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/4/7/e005217.abs
tract
Definition: denominator of QOF clinical indicator
SMOKE004 ( number of patients 15+ who are
recorded as current smokers) divided by GP
practice’s estimated number of patients 15+
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
• prevalence of 14.4% in NHS East
Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
8.5%
8.7%
9.5%
11.4%
11.5%
11.7%
11.8%
12.2%
12.3%
12.4%
12.5%
12.7%
12.8%
13.2%
13.3%
13.4%
13.6%
13.9%
14.5%
14.8%
15.0%
15.2%
15.4%
15.8%
16.0%
16.0%
16.2%
16.8%
17.5%
18.1%
18.9%
21.4%
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25%
THE CROFT MEDICAL CENTRE C82067
SEVERN SURGERY C82112
THE BILLESDON SURGERY C82022
THE HUSBANDS BOSWORTH SURGERY C82109
GLENFIELD SURGERY C82056
ROSEMEAD DRIVE SURGERY C82048
MARKET OVERTON & SOMERBY SURGERIES C82649
KIBWORTH HEALTH CENTRE C82001
DR KILPATRICK AND PARTNERS C82036
THE UPPINGHAM SURGERY C82077
EMPINGHAM MEDICAL CENTRE C82044
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82025
THE CENTRAL SURGERY C82021
OAKHAM MEDICAL PRACTICE C82010
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR C82066
LONG CLAWSON MEDICAL PRACTICE C82016
COUNTESTHORPE HEALTH CENTRE C82002
MARKET HARBOROUGH MED.CTR C82009
COUNTY PRACTICE C82042
WIGSTON CENTRAL SURGERY C82071
THE JUBILEE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82078
NORTHFIELD MEDICAL CENTRE C82068
THE LIMES MEDICAL CENTRE C82055
THE MASHARANI PRACTICE C82611
BUSHLOE SURGERY C82013
KINGSWAY SURGERY C82039
HAZELMERE MEDICAL CENTRE C82098
NARBOROUGH HEALTH CENTRE C82119
LONG STREET SURGERY C82108
ENDERBY MEDICAL CENTRE C82631
LATHAM HOUSE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82038
SOUTH WIGSTON HEALTH CTR. C82079
GP Practice CCG
14
Estimated smoking prevalence (QOF) by GP practice
Note: This method is thought to be a reasonably
robust method in estimating smoking prevalence
for the majority of GP practices. However,
caution is advised for extreme estimates of
smoking prevalence and those with high
numbers of smoking status not recorded and
exceptions.
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
• 38,993 people who are recorded as
smokers in NHS East Leicestershire
and Rutland CCG
• GP practice range: 8.5% to 21.4%
Hypertension
15 CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
16
The Missing Millions On average, each CCG in England has 26,000 residents with
undiagnosed hypertension – these individuals are unaware of
their increased cardiovascular risk and are untreated.
What might help? • support practices to share audit data and systematically
identify gaps and opportunities for improved detection and
management of hypertension
• work with practices and local authorities to maximise
uptake and follow up in the NHS Health Check
• support access to self-test BP stations in waiting rooms
and to ambulatory blood pressure monitoring.
• commission community pharmacists to offer blood
pressure measurement, diagnosis and management
support, including support for adherence to medication
What questions should we ask in our CCG? 1. for each indicator how wide is the variation in achievement
and exception reporting?
2. how many people would benefit if all practices performed
as well as the best?
3. how can we support practices who are average or below
average to perform as well as the best in:
• detection of hypertension
• management of hypertension What do we know? • at least half of all heart attacks and strokes are
caused by high blood pressure and it is a major risk
factor for chronic kidney disease and cognitive decline
• treatment is very effective – every 10mmHg reduction
in systolic blood pressure lowers risk of heart attack
and stroke by 20%
• despite this 4 out of 10 adults with hypertension, over
5 and a half million people in England, remain
undiagnosed
• and even when the condition is identified, treatment is
often suboptimal, with blood pressure poorly
controlled in about 1 out of 3 individuals
Hypertension
High blood pressure is common and costly • it affects around a quarter of all adults
• the NHS costs of hypertension are around £2bn
• social costs are probably considerably higher
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
The Global Burden of Disease
Study confirmed high blood pressure as
a leading cause of premature death
and disability
0.59
0.57
0.60
0.60
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7
England
NHS Leicester City CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
Ratio
0.59
0.57
0.60
0.60
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7
England
NHS Leicester City CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
Ratio
17
Hypertension observed prevalence compared with expected prevalence by CCG
Comparison with CCGs in the STP
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
Note: this slide shows Hypertension prevalence
estimates created using data from QOF
hypertension registers 2014/15 and
Undiagnosed hypertension estimates for adults
16 years and older. 2014. Department of Primary
Care & Public Health, Imperial College London
• the ratio of those diagnosed with
hypertension versus those expected
to have hypertension is 0.6. This
compares to 0.59 for England
• this suggests that 60% of people with
hypertension have been diagnosed
0.57
0.58
0.59
0.59
0.59
0.59
0.59
0.60
0.60
0.60
0.61
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70%
NHS Guildford and Waverley CCG
NHS Mid Essex CCG
NHS Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG
NHS South Norfolk CCG
NHS Horsham and Mid Sussex CCG
NHS South Warwickshire CCG
NHS Surrey Downs CCG
NHS Wiltshire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
NHS South Worcestershire CCG
NHS North Somerset CCG
18
Hypertension observed prevalence compared with expected prevalence by CCG
Comparison with demographically similar CCGs
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
0.44
0.50
0.52
0.52
0.52
0.53
0.53
0.54
0.55
0.57
0.57
0.58
0.59
0.59
0.59
0.61
0.61
0.62
0.62
0.62
0.63
0.64
0.64
0.64
0.65
0.65
0.66
0.67
0.67
0.68
0.70
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0
DR KILPATRICK AND PARTNERS C82036
COUNTY PRACTICE C82042
MARKET OVERTON & SOMERBY SURGERIES C82649
KIBWORTH HEALTH CENTRE C82001
THE LIMES MEDICAL CENTRE C82055
THE MASHARANI PRACTICE C82611
COUNTESTHORPE HEALTH CENTRE C82002
SOUTH WIGSTON HEALTH CTR. C82079
LONG STREET SURGERY C82108
LONG CLAWSON MEDICAL PRACTICE C82016
THE JUBILEE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82078
MARKET HARBOROUGH MED.CTR C82009
NARBOROUGH HEALTH CENTRE C82119
THE BILLESDON SURGERY C82022
GLENFIELD SURGERY C82056
THE CENTRAL SURGERY C82021
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR C82066
WIGSTON CENTRAL SURGERY C82071
THE UPPINGHAM SURGERY C82077
OAKHAM MEDICAL PRACTICE C82010
ENDERBY MEDICAL CENTRE C82631
NORTHFIELD MEDICAL CENTRE C82068
EMPINGHAM MEDICAL CENTRE C82044
LATHAM HOUSE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82038
BUSHLOE SURGERY C82013
ROSEMEAD DRIVE SURGERY C82048
HAZELMERE MEDICAL CENTRE C82098
SEVERN SURGERY C82112
THE CROFT MEDICAL CENTRE C82067
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82025
KINGSWAY SURGERY C82039
Ratio
GP practice CCG
19
Hypertension observed prevalence compared with expected prevalence by GP practice
• it is estimated that there are 32,638
people with undiagnosed
hypertension in NHS East
Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
• GP practice range of observed to
expected hypertension prevalence
0.44 to 0.7
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
79.6%
79.1%
79.4%
80.5%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90%
England
NHS Leicester City CCG
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
79.6%
79.1%
79.4%
80.5%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90%
England
NHS Leicester City CCG
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
20
Percentage of patients with hypertension whose last blood pressure reading (measured in
the preceding 12 months) is 150/90 mmHg or less by CCG
Comparison with CCGs in the STP
*Using QOF clinical indicator HYP006
denominator plus exceptions
• 49,493 people with hypertension
(diagnosed)* in NHS East
Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
• 39,298 (79.4%) people whose blood
pressure is <= 150/90
• 2,048 (4.1%) people who are
excepted from optimal control
• 8,147 (16.5%) additional people
whose blood pressure is not <=
150/90
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
75.3%
78.4%
79.3%
79.4%
79.6%
79.8%
80.0%
80.3%
82.4%
82.6%
85.2%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90%
NHS Surrey Downs CCG
NHS Guildford and Waverley CCG
NHS Mid Essex CCG
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
NHS Wiltshire CCG
NHS North Somerset CCG
NHS Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG
NHS Horsham and Mid Sussex CCG
NHS South Norfolk CCG
NHS South Warwickshire CCG
NHS South Worcestershire CCG
21
Percentage of patients with hypertension whose last blood pressure reading (measured in
the preceding 12 months) is 150/90 mmHg or less by CCG
Comparison with demographically similar CCGs
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
68
243
105
160
239
121
260
96
942
479
215
335
229
134
460
382
297
292
777
79
354
259
276
394
462
407
426
585
264
486
218
151
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
MARKET OVERTON & SOMERBY SURGERIES C82649
THE UPPINGHAM SURGERY C82077
THE MASHARANI PRACTICE C82611
EMPINGHAM MEDICAL CENTRE C82044
COUNTY PRACTICE C82042
ENDERBY MEDICAL CENTRE C82631
THE JUBILEE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82078
THE HUSBANDS BOSWORTH SURGERY C82109
LATHAM HOUSE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82038
OAKHAM MEDICAL PRACTICE C82010
HAZELMERE MEDICAL CENTRE C82098
THE LIMES MEDICAL CENTRE C82055
KIBWORTH HEALTH CENTRE C82001
SEVERN SURGERY C82112
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR C82066
NORTHFIELD MEDICAL CENTRE C82068
COUNTESTHORPE HEALTH CENTRE C82002
THE CENTRAL SURGERY C82021
MARKET HARBOROUGH MED.CTR C82009
NARBOROUGH HEALTH CENTRE C82119
THE CROFT MEDICAL CENTRE C82067
THE BILLESDON SURGERY C82022
SOUTH WIGSTON HEALTH CTR. C82079
BUSHLOE SURGERY C82013
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82025
KINGSWAY SURGERY C82039
WIGSTON CENTRAL SURGERY C82071
GLENFIELD SURGERY C82056
LONG CLAWSON MEDICAL PRACTICE C82016
DR KILPATRICK AND PARTNERS C82036
ROSEMEAD DRIVE SURGERY C82048
LONG STREET SURGERY C82108
No treatment Exceptions reported
22
Percentage of patients with hypertension whose last blood pressure reading
(measured in the preceding 12 months) is not 150/90 mmHg or less by GP practice
• in total, including exceptions, there
are 10,195 people whose blood
pressure is not <= 150/90
• GP practice range: 12.3% to 36.0%
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
66.5%
56.6%
65.8%
69.5%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80%
England
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
NHS Leicester City CCG
66.5%
56.6%
65.8%
69.5%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80%
England
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
NHS Leicester City CCG
23
New diagnosis of hypertension who have been given a CVD risk assessment whose
CVD risk exceeds 20% and treated with statins by CCG
Comparison with CCGs in the STP
• 244 people with a new diagnosis* of
hypertension with a CVD risk of 20%
or higher in NHS East Leicestershire
and Rutland CCG
• 138 (56.6%) people who are currently
treated with statins
• 104 (42.6%) people who are
exempted from treatment with statins
• 2 (0.8%) additional people who are
not currently treated with statins
*Using the QOF clinical indicator CVD-PP001
denominator plus exceptions
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
49.2%
53.9%
55.1%
56.6%
59.7%
61.6%
61.7%
62.1%
63.1%
63.4%
64.4%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70%
NHS South Norfolk CCG
NHS North Somerset CCG
NHS South Worcestershire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
NHS Wiltshire CCG
NHS Horsham and Mid Sussex CCG
NHS Guildford and Waverley CCG
NHS Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG
NHS Mid Essex CCG
NHS Surrey Downs CCG
NHS South Warwickshire CCG
49.2%
53.9%
55.1%
56.6%
59.7%
61.6%
61.7%
62.1%
63.1%
63.4%
64.4%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70%
NHS South Norfolk CCG
NHS North Somerset CCG
NHS South Worcestershire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
NHS Wiltshire CCG
NHS Horsham and Mid Sussex CCG
NHS Guildford and Waverley CCG
NHS Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG
NHS Mid Essex CCG
NHS Surrey Downs CCG
NHS South Warwickshire CCG
24
New diagnosis of hypertension who have been given a CVD risk assessment whose
CVD risk exceeds 20% and treated with statins by CCG
Comparison with demographically similar CCGs
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
1
2
3
3
1
2
2
2
3
3
1
9
2
52
3
6
2
2
6
1
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
THE HUSBANDS BOSWORTH SURGERY C82109
THE MASHARANI PRACTICE C82611
ENDERBY MEDICAL CENTRE C82631
NARBOROUGH HEALTH CENTRE C82119
SEVERN SURGERY C82112
LONG STREET SURGERY C82108
HAZELMERE MEDICAL CENTRE C82098
THE JUBILEE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82078
NORTHFIELD MEDICAL CENTRE C82068
ROSEMEAD DRIVE SURGERY C82048
LONG CLAWSON MEDICAL PRACTICE C82016
COUNTESTHORPE HEALTH CENTRE C82002
KINGSWAY SURGERY C82039
BUSHLOE SURGERY C82013
MARKET HARBOROUGH MED.CTR C82009
THE UPPINGHAM SURGERY C82077
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR C82066
DR KILPATRICK AND PARTNERS C82036
THE CROFT MEDICAL CENTRE C82067
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82025
GLENFIELD SURGERY C82056
THE LIMES MEDICAL CENTRE C82055
EMPINGHAM MEDICAL CENTRE C82044
THE BILLESDON SURGERY C82022
OAKHAM MEDICAL PRACTICE C82010
LATHAM HOUSE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82038
WIGSTON CENTRAL SURGERY C82071
COUNTY PRACTICE C82042
THE CENTRAL SURGERY C82021
KIBWORTH HEALTH CENTRE C82001
SOUTH WIGSTON HEALTH CTR. C82079
MARKET OVERTON & SOMERBY SURGERIES C82649
No treatment Exceptions reported
25
New diagnosis of hypertension who have been given a CVD risk assessment whose
CVD risk exceeds 20% and not treated with statins by GP practice
• in total, including exceptions, there
are 106 people who are not treated
with statins
• GP practice range: 0.0% to 100.0%
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
Stroke
26 CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
27
Only a half of people with known
AF who then suffer a stroke have been
anticoagulated before their stroke.
Stroke is one of the leading causes of
premature death and disability. Stroke is
devastating for individuals and families, and
accounts for a substantial proportion of health
and social care expenditure.
What might help? • increase opportunistic pulse checking especially in over 65s
• support practices to share audit data and systematically
identify gaps and opportunities for improved detection and
management of AF - eg GRASP-AF
• promote systematic use of CHADS-VASC and HASBLED to
ensure those at high risk are offered stroke prevention
• promote systematic use of Warfarin Patient Safety Audit Tool
to ensure optimal time in therapeutic range for people on
warfarin
• develop local consensus statement on risk-benefit balance for
anticoagulants, including the newer treatments (NOACs)
• work with practices and local authorities to maximise uptake
and clinical follow up in the NHS Health Check
• commission community pharmacists to offer pulse checks,
anticoagulant monitoring, and support for adherence to
medication
What questions should we ask in our CCG? 1. for each indicator how wide is the variation in
detection, treatment and exception reporting?
2. how many people would benefit if all practices
performed as well as the best?
3. how can we support practices who are average
and below average to perform as well as the
best in detection of atrial fibrillation and stroke
prevention with anticoagulation.
Atrial fibrillation increases the risk of stroke
by a factor of 5, and strokes caused by AF are
often more severe, with higher mortality and
greater disability.
Anticoagulation reduces the risk of stroke in
people with AF by two thirds.
Despite this, AF is underdiagnosed and under
treated: up to a third of people with AF are
unaware they have the condition and even when
diagnosed inadequate treatment is common –
large numbers do not receive anticoagulants or
have poor anticoagulant control.
Stroke prevention
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
0.70
0.55
0.71
0.72
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8
England
NHS Leicester City CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
0.70
0.55
0.71
0.72
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8
England
NHS Leicester City CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
28
Atrial fibrillation observed prevalence compared to expected prevalence by CCG
Comparison with CCGs in the STP
Note: This slide compares the prevalence of
atrial fibrillation recorded in QOF in 2015/16 to
the estimated prevalence of atrial fibrillation,
taken from National Cardiovascular Intelligence
Network estimates produced in 2017. The
estimates were developed by applying age-sex
specific prevalence rates as reported by Norberg
et al (2013) to GP population estimates from
NHS Digital. Estimates reported are adjusted for
age and sex of the local population.
• the ratio of those diagnosed with atrial
fibrillation versus those expected to
have atrial fibrillation is 0.72. This
compares to 0.7 for England
• this suggests that 72% of people with
atrial fibrillation have been diagnosed.
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
0.65
0.67
0.69
0.70
0.71
0.72
0.72
0.72
0.73
0.75
0.80
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9
NHS Mid Essex CCG
NHS Surrey Downs CCG
NHS South Norfolk CCG
NHS Horsham and Mid Sussex CCG
NHS South Worcestershire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
NHS Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG
NHS South Warwickshire CCG
NHS Wiltshire CCG
NHS Guildford and Waverley CCG
NHS North Somerset CCG
29
Atrial fibrillation observed prevalence compared to expected prevalence by CCG
Comparison with demographically similar CCGs
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
0.3
0.5
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.7
0.7
0.7
0.7
0.7
0.7
0.7
0.7
0.7
0.8
0.8
0.8
0.8
0.8
0.8
0.8
0.8
0.8
0.8
0.8
0.9
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0
NARBOROUGH HEALTH CENTRE C82119
SEVERN SURGERY C82112
LONG STREET SURGERY C82108
NORTHFIELD MEDICAL CENTRE C82068
THE CROFT MEDICAL CENTRE C82067
THE LIMES MEDICAL CENTRE C82055
ROSEMEAD DRIVE SURGERY C82048
COUNTY PRACTICE C82042
DR KILPATRICK AND PARTNERS C82036
COUNTESTHORPE HEALTH CENTRE C82002
KIBWORTH HEALTH CENTRE C82001
MARKET OVERTON & SOMERBY SURGERIES C82649
ENDERBY MEDICAL CENTRE C82631
THE JUBILEE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82078
WIGSTON CENTRAL SURGERY C82071
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR C82066
GLENFIELD SURGERY C82056
KINGSWAY SURGERY C82039
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82025
THE BILLESDON SURGERY C82022
THE MASHARANI PRACTICE C82611
THE HUSBANDS BOSWORTH SURGERY C82109
HAZELMERE MEDICAL CENTRE C82098
SOUTH WIGSTON HEALTH CTR. C82079
THE UPPINGHAM SURGERY C82077
EMPINGHAM MEDICAL CENTRE C82044
LATHAM HOUSE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82038
THE CENTRAL SURGERY C82021
LONG CLAWSON MEDICAL PRACTICE C82016
BUSHLOE SURGERY C82013
MARKET HARBOROUGH MED.CTR C82009
OAKHAM MEDICAL PRACTICE C82010
Ratio
GP practice CCG
30
Atrial fibrillation observed prevalence compared with expected prevalence by GP practice
• it is estimated that there are 9,637
people with undiagnosed atrial
fibrillation in NHS East Leicestershire
and Rutland CCG
• GP practice range of observed to
expected atrial fibrillation prevalence
0.3 to 0.9
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
77.9%
80.9%
81.4%
82.2%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
England
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
NHS Leicester City CCG
Optimal management No treatment Exceptions reported
31
In patients with AF with a CHA2DS2-VASc score of 2 or more,
the percentage treated with anti-coagulation therapy by CCG
Comparison with CCGs in the STP
• 5,660 people with atrial fibrillation*
with a CHA2DS2-VASc score >= 2 in
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland
CCG
• 4,578 (80.9%) people treated with
anti-coagulation therapy
• 592 (10.5%) people who are
exceptions
• 490 (8.7%) additional people with a
recorded CHA2DS2-VASc score >= 2
who are not treated
*Using the QOF clinical indicator AF007
denominator plus exceptions
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
75.3%
75.4%
77.4%
77.8%
77.9%
78.9%
79.8%
80.2%
80.4%
80.9%
81.0%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
NHS Horsham and Mid Sussex CCG
NHS South Warwickshire CCG
NHS South Norfolk CCG
NHS North Somerset CCG
NHS Mid Essex CCG
NHS South Worcestershire CCG
NHS Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG
NHS Wiltshire CCG
NHS Guildford and Waverley CCG
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
NHS Surrey Downs CCG
Optimal management No treatment Exceptions reported
32
In patients with AF with a CHA2DS2-VASc score of 2 or more, the percentage
treated with anti-coagulation therapy by CCG
Comparison with demographically similar CCGs
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
1
10
15
22
21
22
28
17
40
23
11
30
29
23
23
30
26
122
14
11
24
37
41
51
31
94
121
58
20
62
15
10
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
NARBOROUGH HEALTH CENTRE C82119
THE MASHARANI PRACTICE C82611
THE BILLESDON SURGERY C82022
THE CENTRAL SURGERY C82021
THE CROFT MEDICAL CENTRE C82067
COUNTESTHORPE HEALTH CENTRE C82002
NORTHFIELD MEDICAL CENTRE C82068
LONG CLAWSON MEDICAL PRACTICE C82016
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR C82066
EMPINGHAM MEDICAL CENTRE C82044
MARKET OVERTON & SOMERBY SURGERIES C82649
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82025
THE JUBILEE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82078
KIBWORTH HEALTH CENTRE C82001
DR KILPATRICK AND PARTNERS C82036
COUNTY PRACTICE C82042
KINGSWAY SURGERY C82039
LATHAM HOUSE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82038
ROSEMEAD DRIVE SURGERY C82048
ENDERBY MEDICAL CENTRE C82631
HAZELMERE MEDICAL CENTRE C82098
THE LIMES MEDICAL CENTRE C82055
WIGSTON CENTRAL SURGERY C82071
GLENFIELD SURGERY C82056
SOUTH WIGSTON HEALTH CTR. C82079
OAKHAM MEDICAL PRACTICE C82010
MARKET HARBOROUGH MED.CTR C82009
THE UPPINGHAM SURGERY C82077
THE HUSBANDS BOSWORTH SURGERY C82109
BUSHLOE SURGERY C82013
SEVERN SURGERY C82112
LONG STREET SURGERY C82108
No treatment Exceptions reported
33
In patients with AF with a CHA2DS2-VASc score of 2 or more, the percentage treated
with anti-coagulation therapy by GP practice
• in total, including exceptions, there
are 1,082 people with a recorded
CHA2DS2-VASc score >= 2 who are
not treated
• GP practice range: 6.3% to 40.0%
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
6
7
8
23
20
31
25
7
5
2
-30%-25%-20%-15%-10%-5%0%5%10%15%
LONG STREET SURGERY
SEVERN SURGERY
THE HUSBANDS BOSWORTH SURGERY
BUSHLOE SURGERY
THE UPPINGHAM SURGERY
MARKET HARBOROUGH MED.CTR
OAKHAM MEDICAL PRACTICE
SOUTH WIGSTON HEALTH CTR.
HAZELMERE MEDICAL CENTRE
ENDERBY MEDICAL CENTRE
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE
DR KILPATRICK AND PARTNERS
THE JUBILEE MEDICAL PRACTICE
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR
NORTHFIELD MEDICAL CENTRE
THE CROFT MEDICAL CENTRE
THE BILLESDON SURGERY
THE MASHARANI PRACTICE
THE CENTRAL SURGERY
NARBOROUGH HEALTH CENTRE
34 34 CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
In patients with AF with a CHA2DS2-VASc score of 2 or more, the percentage treated
with anti-coagulation therapy by GP practice – opportunities compared to GP cluster
• using the GP cluster method of
calculating potential gains, if each
practice was to achieve as well as the
upper quartile of its national cluster,
then an additional 164 people would
be treated
Details of this methodology are available on slide
9. Click here to view them.
83.8%
82.8%
83.3%
84.5%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
England
NHS Leicester City CCG
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
Below 150/90 Not below 150/90 Exceptions reported
35
Percentage of patients with a history of stroke whose last blood pressure reading
(measured in the preceding 12 months) is 150/90 mmHg or less by CCG
Comparison with CCGs in the STP
*Using the QOF clinical indicator STIA003
denominator plus exceptions
• 6,041 people with a history of stroke
or TIA* in NHS East Leicestershire
and Rutland CCG
• 5,034 (83.3%) people whose blood
pressure is <= 150 / 90
• 290 (4.8%) people who are
exceptions
• 717 (11.9%) additional people whose
blood pressure is not <= 150 / 90
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
80.3%
81.5%
82.3%
83.2%
83.3%
84.0%
84.2%
84.8%
85.0%
86.5%
88.3%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
NHS Surrey Downs CCG
NHS Guildford and Waverley CCG
NHS Mid Essex CCG
NHS Wiltshire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
NHS Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG
NHS Horsham and Mid Sussex CCG
NHS South Norfolk CCG
NHS North Somerset CCG
NHS South Warwickshire CCG
NHS South Worcestershire CCG
Below 150/90 Not below 150/90 Exceptions reported
36
Percentage of patients with a history of stroke whose last blood pressure reading
(measured in the preceding 12 months) is 150/90 mmHg or less by CCG
Comparison with demographically similar CCGs
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
3
3
15
7
13
25
9
72
29
41
38
56
5
35
30
16
23
42
44
41
97
31
26
35
56
36
27
23
19
38
16
56
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
MARKET OVERTON & SOMERBY SURGERIES C82649
ENDERBY MEDICAL CENTRE C82631
COUNTY PRACTICE C82042
SEVERN SURGERY C82112
EMPINGHAM MEDICAL CENTRE C82044
THE UPPINGHAM SURGERY C82077
THE HUSBANDS BOSWORTH SURGERY C82109
LATHAM HOUSE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82038
THE JUBILEE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82078
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR C82066
THE LIMES MEDICAL CENTRE C82055
OAKHAM MEDICAL PRACTICE C82010
NARBOROUGH HEALTH CENTRE C82119
THE CENTRAL SURGERY C82021
COUNTESTHORPE HEALTH CENTRE C82002
THE MASHARANI PRACTICE C82611
THE BILLESDON SURGERY C82022
BUSHLOE SURGERY C82013
DR KILPATRICK AND PARTNERS C82036
NORTHFIELD MEDICAL CENTRE C82068
MARKET HARBOROUGH MED.CTR C82009
KINGSWAY SURGERY C82039
KIBWORTH HEALTH CENTRE C82001
SOUTH WIGSTON HEALTH CTR. C82079
GLENFIELD SURGERY C82056
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82025
HAZELMERE MEDICAL CENTRE C82098
LONG CLAWSON MEDICAL PRACTICE C82016
ROSEMEAD DRIVE SURGERY C82048
THE CROFT MEDICAL CENTRE C82067
LONG STREET SURGERY C82108
WIGSTON CENTRAL SURGERY C82071
No treatment Exceptions reported
37
Percentage of patients with a history of stroke whose last blood pressure reading (measured
in the preceding 12 months) is not 150/90 mmHg or less by GP practice
• in total, including exceptions, there
are 1,007 people whose blood
pressure is not <= 150 / 90
• GP practice range: 4.3% to 27.6%
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
91.8%
90.2%
91.9%
92.4%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
England
NHS Leicester City CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
Below 150/90 Not below 150/90 Exceptions reported
38
Percentage of patients with a stroke shown to be non-haemorrhagic, or a history of TIA,
who have a record in the preceding 12 months that an anti-platelet agent, or an
anti-coagulant is being taken by CCG
Comparison with CCGs in the STP
*Using the QOF clinical indicator STIA007
denominator plus exceptions
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
• 4,176 people with a stroke shown to
be non-haemorrhagic* in NHS East
Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
• 3,859 (92.4%) people who are taking
an anti-platetet agent or anti-
coagulant
• 218 (5.2%) people who are
exceptions
• 99 (2.4%) additional people with no
treatment
89.9%
90.4%
90.5%
91.3%
91.4%
91.4%
91.5%
91.8%
91.8%
92.1%
92.4%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
NHS Surrey Downs CCG
NHS Mid Essex CCG
NHS Guildford and Waverley CCG
NHS South Warwickshire CCG
NHS Horsham and Mid Sussex CCG
NHS North Somerset CCG
NHS South Norfolk CCG
NHS Wiltshire CCG
NHS Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG
NHS South Worcestershire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
Below 150/90 Not below 150/90 Exceptions reported
39
Percentage of patients with a stroke shown to be non-haemorrhagic, or a history of TIA,
who have a record in the preceding 12 months that an anti-platelet agent,
or an anti-coagulant is being taken by CCG
Comparison with demographically similar CCGs
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
2
2
5
5
6
6
1
10
8
10
10
31
4
24
20
4
6
7
20
6
7
13
8
11
14
16
4
4
5
12
8
28
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
COUNTY PRACTICE C82042
SEVERN SURGERY C82112
NORTHFIELD MEDICAL CENTRE C82068
BUSHLOE SURGERY C82013
WIGSTON CENTRAL SURGERY C82071
THE CENTRAL SURGERY C82021
NARBOROUGH HEALTH CENTRE C82119
THE LIMES MEDICAL CENTRE C82055
THE JUBILEE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82078
THE UPPINGHAM SURGERY C82077
DR KILPATRICK AND PARTNERS C82036
MARKET HARBOROUGH MED.CTR C82009
ROSEMEAD DRIVE SURGERY C82048
LATHAM HOUSE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82038
OAKHAM MEDICAL PRACTICE C82010
LONG CLAWSON MEDICAL PRACTICE C82016
THE BILLESDON SURGERY C82022
HAZELMERE MEDICAL CENTRE C82098
GLENFIELD SURGERY C82056
THE MASHARANI PRACTICE C82611
EMPINGHAM MEDICAL CENTRE C82044
COUNTESTHORPE HEALTH CENTRE C82002
KIBWORTH HEALTH CENTRE C82001
KINGSWAY SURGERY C82039
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82025
SOUTH WIGSTON HEALTH CTR. C82079
MARKET OVERTON & SOMERBY SURGERIES C82649
LONG STREET SURGERY C82108
ENDERBY MEDICAL CENTRE C82631
THE CROFT MEDICAL CENTRE C82067
THE HUSBANDS BOSWORTH SURGERY C82109
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR C82066
No treatment Exceptions reported
40
Percentage of patients with a stroke shown to be non-haemorrhagic, or a history of TIA,
who do not have a record in the preceding 12 months that an anti-platelet agent,
or an anti-coagulant is being taken by GP practice
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
• in total, including exceptions, there
are 317 people who are not taking an
anti-platelet agent or anti-coagulant
• GP practice range: 1.7% to 14.1%
Diabetes
41 CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
Type 2 Diabetes in numbers • diagnosed prevalence – 3.0 million
• undiagnosed diabetes – 900,000
• non-diabetic hyperglycaemia (high risk of diabetes) – 5 million
What might help • ensure universal participation by practices in the National
Diabetes Audit (NDA)
• benchmark practice level data from the NDA – and support
practices to explore variation
• increase support for patient education and shared
management
• maximise uptake of the NHS Health Check to aid detection of
diabetes and Non Diabetic Hyperglycaemia
• maximise uptake of the NHS Diabetes Prevention Programme
What questions should we ask in our CCG? 1. for each indicator how wide is the variation in achievement and
exception reporting?
2. how many people would benefit if all practices performed as well
as the best?
3. how can we support practices who are average and below
average to perform as well as the best in:
• detection of diabetes
• delivery of the 8 care processes and achievement of the 3
treatment targets
• identification and management of Non-diabetic hyperglycaemia
Type 2 diabetes is often preventable People at high risk of developing type 2 diabetes
can be identified through the NHS Health Check,
and the disease can be prevented or delayed in
many through intensive behaviour change support.
Complications of diabetes are preventable Diabetes is a major cause of premature death and
disability and greatly increases the risk of heart
disease and stroke, kidney failure, amputations and
blindness. 80% of NHS spending on diabetes goes
on managing these complications, most of which
could be prevented. There are 8 essential care
processes, in addition to retinal screening, that
together substantially reduce complication rates.
Despite this, around a half of people with diabetes
do not receive all 8 care processes, and there is
widespread variation between CCGs and practices
in levels of achievement
Diabetes prevention and management
42 CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
Diabetes costs the NHS
£9.8 billion per year – and the
prevalence is rising
0.77
0.77
0.83
0.84
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9
England
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
NHS Leicester City CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
0.77
0.77
0.83
0.84
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9
England
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
NHS Leicester City CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
43
Diabetes observed prevalence compared with expected prevalence by CCG
Comparison with CCGs in the STP
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
Note: This slide compares the prevalence of
Diabetes recorded in QOF in 2015/16 to the
expected prevalence of Diabetes in 2016 taken
from the NCVIN diabetes prevalence model
produced in 2015.
• 0.77 ratio of observed to expected
diabetes prevalence in NHS East
Leicestershire and Rutland CCG,
compared to 0.77 in England
• this suggests 77% of people have
been diagnosed
0.63
0.67
0.68
0.68
0.69
0.71
0.71
0.73
0.77
0.77
0.79
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9
NHS Guildford and Waverley CCG
NHS Surrey Downs CCG
NHS South Warwickshire CCG
NHS Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG
NHS Horsham and Mid Sussex CCG
NHS South Norfolk CCG
NHS North Somerset CCG
NHS Wiltshire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
NHS Mid Essex CCG
NHS South Worcestershire CCG
44
Diabetes observed prevalence compared with expected prevalence by CCG
Comparison with demographically similar CCGs
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
4.9%
5.3%
5.4%
5.5%
5.7%
5.7%
5.7%
5.9%
5.9%
5.9%
5.9%
5.9%
6.1%
6.1%
6.3%
6.6%
6.7%
6.8%
6.8%
6.9%
7.0%
7.0%
7.3%
7.6%
7.7%
7.8%
7.9%
8.0%
8.0%
8.8%
9.1%
10.1%
0% 2% 4% 6% 8% 10% 12%
THE BILLESDON SURGERY C82022
THE MASHARANI PRACTICE C82611
DR KILPATRICK AND PARTNERS C82036
COUNTESTHORPE HEALTH CENTRE C82002
LONG CLAWSON MEDICAL PRACTICE C82016
ENDERBY MEDICAL CENTRE C82631
KIBWORTH HEALTH CENTRE C82001
THE UPPINGHAM SURGERY C82077
THE HUSBANDS BOSWORTH SURGERY C82109
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82025
MARKET OVERTON & SOMERBY SURGERIES C82649
THE LIMES MEDICAL CENTRE C82055
GLENFIELD SURGERY C82056
MARKET HARBOROUGH MED.CTR C82009
EMPINGHAM MEDICAL CENTRE C82044
NORTHFIELD MEDICAL CENTRE C82068
COUNTY PRACTICE C82042
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR C82066
SOUTH WIGSTON HEALTH CTR. C82079
KINGSWAY SURGERY C82039
THE JUBILEE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82078
LATHAM HOUSE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82038
HAZELMERE MEDICAL CENTRE C82098
OAKHAM MEDICAL PRACTICE C82010
WIGSTON CENTRAL SURGERY C82071
BUSHLOE SURGERY C82013
THE CROFT MEDICAL CENTRE C82067
ROSEMEAD DRIVE SURGERY C82048
THE CENTRAL SURGERY C82021
LONG STREET SURGERY C82108
NARBOROUGH HEALTH CENTRE C82119
SEVERN SURGERY C82112
GP practice CCG
45
Diabetes prevalence by GP practice
• GP practice range of observed
diabetes 4.9% to 10.1%
• there are an estimated 5,266 people
with undiagnosed diabetes in NHS
East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
Note: The estimated number of undiagnosed
people with diabetes has been calculated by
multiplying the estimated prevalence rate to the
2015/16 QOF list size and subtracting the
number of people on the diabetes register.
6.5%
6.7%
6.6%
9.0%
1.9%
1.3%
2.0%
1.8%
11.2%
11.3%
12.3%
11.6%
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25%
England
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
NHS Leicester City CCG
Diabetes prevalence Undiagnosed diabetes prevalence
Expected non-diabetic hyperglycaemia prevalence
6.5%
6.7%
6.6%
9.0%
1.9%
1.3%
2.0%
1.8%
11.2%
11.3%
12.3%
11.6%
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25%
England
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
NHS Leicester City CCG
Diabetes prevalence Undiagnosed diabetes prevalence
Expected non-diabetic hyperglycaemia prevalence
46
Expected total prevalence of diabetes and non-diabetic hyperglycaemia
• the estimated total prevalence of
diabetes in NHS East Leicestershire
and Rutland CCG is 8.6% (diagnosed
and undiagnosed)
• in addition, there are an estimated
12.3% of people in NHS East
Leicestershire and Rutland CCG who
are at increased risk of developing
diabetes (i.e. with non-diabetic
hyperglycaemia)
Note: Prevalence estimates of non-diabetic
hyperglycaemia were developed using Health
Survey for England (HSE) data. Five years of
HSE data were combined, 2009- 2013. The
estimates take into account the age, ethnic group
and estimated body mass index of the population.
These estimates were produced using the GP
registered population.
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
• this means that 21.0% of the
population in NHS East Leicestershire
and Rutland CCG are estimated to
have diabetes, or at high risk of
developing of diabetes
52.6%
41.2%
49.2%
56.6%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60%
England
NHS Leicester City CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
52.6%
41.2%
49.2%
56.6%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60%
England
NHS Leicester City CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
47
People with diabetes who had eight care processes by CCG 2015/16
• overall practice participation in the
2015/16 audit was 81.4% in England
• data on care processes and treatment
targets are taken from the National
Diabetes Audit (NDA)
• in NHS East Leicestershire and
Rutland CCG, 19 out of 32 practices
(59.4%) participated in the NDA. Data
is not available for the remaining
practices
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
• 56.6% of people with diabetes (of
practices who participated in the
audit) had the eight recommended
care processes in NHS East
Leicestershire and Rutland CCG,
compared to 52.6% in England
16.7%
24.3%
38.9%
47.9%
48.3%
53.8%
54.6%
54.7%
55.3%
56.5%
56.6%
56.9%
63.0%
63.9%
66.7%
68.1%
70.6%
71.0%
73.7%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
MARKET HARBOROUGH MED.CTR C82009
OAKHAM MEDICAL PRACTICE C82010
KINGSWAY SURGERY C82039
COUNTY PRACTICE C82042
ROSEMEAD DRIVE SURGERY C82048
THE CROFT MEDICAL CENTRE C82067
WIGSTON CENTRAL SURGERY C82071
SOUTH WIGSTON HEALTH CTR. C82079
LONG STREET SURGERY C82108
THE HUSBANDS BOSWORTH SURGERY C82109
SEVERN SURGERY C82112
NARBOROUGH HEALTH CENTRE C82119
MARKET OVERTON & SOMERBY SURGERIES C82649
BUSHLOE SURGERY C82013
COUNTESTHORPE HEALTH CENTRE C82002
EMPINGHAM MEDICAL CENTRE C82044
THE CENTRAL SURGERY C82021
GLENFIELD SURGERY C82056
THE LIMES MEDICAL CENTRE C82055
ENDERBY MEDICAL CENTRE C82631
HAZELMERE MEDICAL CENTRE C82098
KIBWORTH HEALTH CENTRE C82001
DR KILPATRICK AND PARTNERS C82036
LONG CLAWSON MEDICAL PRACTICE C82016
THE MASHARANI PRACTICE C82611
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR C82066
THE JUBILEE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82078
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82025
LATHAM HOUSE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82038
NORTHFIELD MEDICAL CENTRE C82068
THE UPPINGHAM SURGERY C82077
THE BILLESDON SURGERY C82022
GP practice Average of practices in the CCG who participated in the audit
48
People with diabetes who had eight care processes by GP practice, 2015/16
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
• achievement - 8 care processes: in
practices who provided data via the
NDA, between 16.7% and 73.7% of
patients received all 8 care processes
• at least 4,734 people did not receive
the eight care processes
39.0%
41.7%
41.9%
43.1%
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35% 40% 45% 50%
England
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
NHS Leicester City CCG
39.0%
41.7%
41.9%
43.1%
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35% 40% 45% 50%
England
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
NHS Leicester City CCG
49
People with diabetes who met all 3 treatment targets by CCG, 2015/16
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
• 41.9% of people with diabetes (of
practices who participated in the
audit) met the three treatment targets
in NHS East Leicestershire and
Rutland CCG, compared to 39.0% in
England
30.2%
31.9%
31.9%
34.1%
34.8%
37.6%
39.3%
39.4%
39.6%
40.5%
42.9%
44.2%
45.4%
46.5%
46.8%
47.5%
49.0%
50.6%
51.2%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
MARKET HARBOROUGH MED.CTR C82009
OAKHAM MEDICAL PRACTICE C82010
KINGSWAY SURGERY C82039
COUNTY PRACTICE C82042
ROSEMEAD DRIVE SURGERY C82048
THE CROFT MEDICAL CENTRE C82067
WIGSTON CENTRAL SURGERY C82071
SOUTH WIGSTON HEALTH CTR. C82079
LONG STREET SURGERY C82108
THE HUSBANDS BOSWORTH SURGERY C82109
SEVERN SURGERY C82112
NARBOROUGH HEALTH CENTRE C82119
MARKET OVERTON & SOMERBY SURGERIES C82649
DR KILPATRICK AND PARTNERS C82036
LONG CLAWSON MEDICAL PRACTICE C82016
GLENFIELD SURGERY C82056
KIBWORTH HEALTH CENTRE C82001
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82025
THE CENTRAL SURGERY C82021
COUNTESTHORPE HEALTH CENTRE C82002
THE BILLESDON SURGERY C82022
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR C82066
THE JUBILEE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82078
HAZELMERE MEDICAL CENTRE C82098
THE LIMES MEDICAL CENTRE C82055
THE MASHARANI PRACTICE C82611
BUSHLOE SURGERY C82013
THE UPPINGHAM SURGERY C82077
LATHAM HOUSE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82038
ENDERBY MEDICAL CENTRE C82631
NORTHFIELD MEDICAL CENTRE C82068
EMPINGHAM MEDICAL CENTRE C82044
GP practice Average of practices in the CCG who participated in the audit
50
People with diabetes who met all 3 treatment targets by GP practice, 2015/16
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
• achievement - 3 treatment targets: in
practices who provided data via the
NDA, between 30.2% and 51.2% of
patients achieved all 3 treatment
targets
• at least 5,723 people did not meet the
three treatment targets
76
38
74
43
43
34
27
15
31
24
11
1
2
-20%-15%-10%-5%0%5%10%
DR KILPATRICK AND PARTNERS
LONG CLAWSON MEDICAL PRACTICE
GLENFIELD SURGERY
KIBWORTH HEALTH CENTRE
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE
THE CENTRAL SURGERY
COUNTESTHORPE HEALTH CENTRE
THE BILLESDON SURGERY
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR
THE JUBILEE MEDICAL PRACTICE
HAZELMERE MEDICAL CENTRE
THE MASHARANI PRACTICE
THE LIMES MEDICAL CENTRE
BUSHLOE SURGERY
THE UPPINGHAM SURGERY
ENDERBY MEDICAL CENTRE
LATHAM HOUSE MEDICAL PRACTICE
EMPINGHAM MEDICAL CENTRE
NORTHFIELD MEDICAL CENTRE
51
People with diabetes who met all 3 treatment targets by GP practice, 2015/16
- opportunities compared to GP cluster
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
• using the GP cluster method of
calculating potential gains, if each
practice was to achieve as well as the
upper quartile of its national cluster,
then an additional 418 people would
be treated
Details of this methodology are available on slide
9. Click here to view them.
Kidney
52 CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
Chronic Kidney Disease can
progress to kidney failure and it
substantially increases the risk
of heart attack and stroke.
Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) is common.
It is one of the commonest co-morbidities and affects a third
of people over 75. In 2010 it was estimated to cost the NHS
around £1.5bn. Average length of stay in hospital tends to
be longer and outcomes are considerably worse:
approximately 7,000 excess strokes and 12,000 excess
heart attacks occur each year in people with CKD
compared to those without.
Individuals with CKD are also at much higher risk of
developing acute kidney injury when they have an
intercurrent illness such as pneumonia What might help • Support practices to share audit data and systematically
identify gaps and opportunities for improved detection
and management of CKD.
• Promote uptake of and follow up from the NHS Health
Check to aid detection and management of CKD
• Offer local training and education in the detection and
management of CKD
What questions should we ask in our CCG? 1. for each indicator how wide is the variation in
achievement and exception reporting?
2. how many people would benefit if all practices
performed as well as the best?
3. how can we support practices who are average and
below average to perform as well as the best in:
• detection of CKD
• more systematic delivery of evidence based care
Late diagnosis of CKD is common. Around a third of people with CKD are undiagnosed. More
opportunistic testing and improved uptake of the NHS
Health Check will increase detection rates.
Evidence based guidance from NICE highlights CVD
risk reduction, good blood pressure control and
management of proteinuria as essential steps to reduce the
risk of cardiovascular events and progression to kidney
failure. Despite this there is often significant variation
between practices in achievement and exception reporting.
Management of chronic kidney disease
53 CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
0.68
0.52
0.57
0.72
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8
England
NHS Leicester City CCG
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
Ratio
0.68
0.52
0.57
0.72
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8
England
NHS Leicester City CCG
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
Ratio
54
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) observed prevalence (2015/16) compared
with expected prevalence (2011) by CCG
Comparison with CCGs in the STP
Note: This slide compares the prevalence of CKD
recorded in QOF in 2015/16 to the expected
prevalence of CKD produced by the University of
Southampton in 2011. A small number of CCGs
have a ratio greater than 1. It is unlikely that all
people with CKD will be diagnosed in any CCG
and therefore a ratio greater than 1 suggests that
the figures are underestimating the true CKD
prevalence in the area. These ratios should be
taken as an indication of the comparative scale of
undiagnosed CKD rather than absolute figures.
• the ratio of those diagnosed with
chronic kidney disease versus those
expected to have chronic kidney
disease is 0.57. This compares to
0.68 for England
• this suggests that 57% of people with
chronic kidney disease have been
diagnosed
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
0.51
0.55
0.57
0.61
0.65
0.65
0.66
0.73
0.78
0.78
0.78
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9
NHS Guildford and Waverley CCG
NHS Surrey Downs CCG
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
NHS Wiltshire CCG
NHS South Norfolk CCG
NHS Horsham and Mid Sussex CCG
NHS Mid Essex CCG
NHS North Somerset CCG
NHS South Warwickshire CCG
NHS Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG
NHS South Worcestershire CCG
Ratio
55
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) observed prevalence (2015/16)
compared with expected prevalence (2011) by CCG
Comparison with demographically similar CCGs
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
2.1%
2.1%
2.3%
2.3%
2.3%
2.6%
2.7%
2.8%
2.8%
3.0%
3.3%
3.3%
3.5%
3.5%
3.6%
3.6%
3.6%
3.6%
3.7%
3.8%
3.8%
4.0%
4.0%
4.2%
4.2%
4.3%
4.5%
4.6%
5.5%
5.6%
6.1%
7.6%
0% 1% 2% 3% 4% 5% 6% 7% 8% 9%
GLENFIELD SURGERY C82056
ROSEMEAD DRIVE SURGERY C82048
LONG CLAWSON MEDICAL PRACTICE C82016
ENDERBY MEDICAL CENTRE C82631
KINGSWAY SURGERY C82039
COUNTESTHORPE HEALTH CENTRE C82002
THE JUBILEE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82078
NORTHFIELD MEDICAL CENTRE C82068
COUNTY PRACTICE C82042
THE BILLESDON SURGERY C82022
KIBWORTH HEALTH CENTRE C82001
THE LIMES MEDICAL CENTRE C82055
THE CROFT MEDICAL CENTRE C82067
EMPINGHAM MEDICAL CENTRE C82044
SOUTH WIGSTON HEALTH CTR. C82079
MARKET OVERTON & SOMERBY SURGERIES C82649
THE UPPINGHAM SURGERY C82077
THE CENTRAL SURGERY C82021
LONG STREET SURGERY C82108
DR KILPATRICK AND PARTNERS C82036
BUSHLOE SURGERY C82013
NARBOROUGH HEALTH CENTRE C82119
SEVERN SURGERY C82112
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR C82066
THE MASHARANI PRACTICE C82611
HAZELMERE MEDICAL CENTRE C82098
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82025
LATHAM HOUSE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82038
WIGSTON CENTRAL SURGERY C82071
THE HUSBANDS BOSWORTH SURGERY C82109
OAKHAM MEDICAL PRACTICE C82010
MARKET HARBOROUGH MED.CTR C82009
GP practice CCG
56
CKD prevalence by GP practice, 2015/16
Note: CCG estimates for the estimated
number of people with CKD are based on
applying a proportion from a resident based
population estimate to a GP registered
population. The characteristics of registered
and resident populations may vary in some
CCGs, and local interpretation is required.
• it is estimated that there are 7,748
people with undiagnosed chronic
kidney disease in NHS East
Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
• GP practice range of observed CKD:
2.1% to 7.6%
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
74.4%
74.0%
74.3%
74.8%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
England
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
NHS Leicester City CCG
Below 140/85 Not below 140/85 Exceptions reported
57
Percentage of patients on the CKD register whose last blood pressure reading (measured in
the preceding 12 months) is 140/85 mmHg or less by CCG, 2014/15
Comparison with CCGs in the STP
*Using the QOF clinical indicator CKD002
denominator plus exceptions. Note: as
the CKD002 indicator was removed from
the QOF in 15/16 this is historic data
taken from the 2014/15 QOF.
• 10,384 people with CKD (diagnosed*)
in NHS East Leicestershire and
Rutland CCG
• 7,720 (74.3%) people whose blood
pressure is <= 140 /85
• 966 (9.3%) people who are
exceptions
• 1,698 (16.4%) additional people
whose blood pressure is not <= 140 /
85
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
71.6%
71.9%
72.0%
72.0%
72.2%
73.3%
73.7%
74.3%
75.5%
75.7%
76.5%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
NHS Guildford and Waverley CCG
NHS Surrey Downs CCG
NHS Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG
NHS Mid Essex CCG
NHS Horsham and Mid Sussex CCG
NHS Wiltshire CCG
NHS South Norfolk CCG
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
NHS North Somerset CCG
NHS South Warwickshire CCG
NHS South Worcestershire CCG
Below 140/85 Not below 140/85 Exceptions reported
58
Percentage of patients on the CKD register whose last blood pressure reading (measured
in the preceding 12 months) is 140/85 mmHg or less by CCG, 2014/15
Comparison with demographically similar CCGs
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
9
27
46
56
21
156
56
55
17
267
63
37
97
384
44
49
96
69
55
65
70
74
68
73
119
84
118
44
183
41
34
87
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
DR KER D A J & PTNS (MARKET OVERTON) C82649
EMPINGHAM MEDICAL CENTRE C82044
DR WATSON H J & PARTNERS C82098
DR JONES J P & PTNRS C82077
DR BHUTANI H C & PARTNER C82631
OAKHAM MEDICAL PRACTICE C82010
NORTHFIELD MEDICAL CENTRE C82068
BUSHLOE END SURGERY C82013
NARBOROUGH HEALTH CENTRE C82119
DR JL HARRIS & PARTNERS C82038
COUNTY PRACTICE C82042
DR SHANKS M P & PTNRS C82112
DR ROWLEY H A & PTNRS C82055
MARKET HARBOROUGH MED.CTR C82009
HUSBANDS BOSWORTH SURGERY C82109
DR MASHARANI V C82611
DR GRIFFIN B J & PARTNERS C82071
THE JUBILEE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82078
DR HOLLINGTON A & PTNS C82039
KIBWORTH HEALTH CENTRE C82001
DR SHARP AJH & PARTNERS C82079
DR KUNCEWICZ IR & PARTNERS C82021
DR ARAM G E & PTNRS C82002
GLENFIELD SURGERY C82056
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82025
DALBY DADGE MCCOLE & PARTNERS C82067
DR KILPATRICK & PTNRS C82036
DR S WOODING & PARTNERS C82016
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR C82066
LONG STREET SURGERY C82108
DR SS CHOHAN & PARTNERS C82048
DR AUSTIN M W E & PTNRS C82022
Not below 140/85 Exceptions reported
59
Percentage of patients on the CKD register whose last blood pressure reading (measured in
the preceding 12 months) is not 140/85 mmHg or less by GP practice, 2014/15
• in total, including exceptions, there
are 2,664 people whose blood
pressure is not <= 140 / 85
• GP practice range: 8.5% to 53.7%
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
58
22
24
21
74
47
30
25
23
35
2
2
-40%-35%-30%-25%-20%-15%-10%-5%0%5%10%15%
DR AUSTIN M W E & PTNRS
DR SS CHOHAN & PARTNERS
LONG STREET SURGERY
DR S WOODING & PARTNERS
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR
DR KILPATRICK & PTNRS
DALBY DADGE MCCOLE & PARTNERS
DR ARAM G E & PTNRS
KIBWORTH HEALTH CENTRE
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE
DR BHUTANI H C & PARTNER
COUNTY PRACTICE
DR JL HARRIS & PARTNERS
BUSHLOE END SURGERY
DR WATSON H J & PARTNERS
EMPINGHAM MEDICAL CENTRE
NORTHFIELD MEDICAL CENTRE
OAKHAM MEDICAL PRACTICE
DR JONES J P & PTNRS
DR KER D A J & PTNS (MARKET OVERTON)
60
Percentage of patients on the CKD register whose last blood pressure reading (measured in the preceding
12 months) is not 140/85 mmHg or less by GP practice, 2014/15 – opportunities compared to GP cluster
• using the GP cluster method of
calculating potential gains, if each
practice was to achieve as well as the
upper quartile of its national cluster,
then an additional 570 people would
be treated
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
Details of this methodology are available on slide
9. Click here to view them.
75.4%
74.9%
78.5%
78.6%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
England
NHS Leicester City CCG
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
Recorded Not recorded Exceptions reported
61
Percentage of patients on the CKD register whose notes have a record of a
urine albumin: creatinine ratio test in the preceding 12 months by CCG, 2014/15
Comparison with CCGs in the STP
• 10,384 people with CKD (diagnosed*)
in NHS East Leicestershire and
Rutland CCG
• 8,151 (78.5%) people who have a
record of urine albumin:creatinine
ratio test
• 664 (6.4%) people who are
exceptions
• 1,569 (15.1%) additional people who
have no record of urine
albumin:creatinine ratio test
*Using the QOF clinical indicator CKD004
denominator plus exceptions. Note: as
the CKD004 indicator was removed from
the QOF in 15/16 this is historic data
taken from the 2014/15 QOF.
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
61.3%
66.6%
71.4%
71.5%
73.9%
74.7%
74.8%
76.7%
77.0%
77.4%
78.5%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
NHS Mid Essex CCG
NHS Surrey Downs CCG
NHS Horsham and Mid Sussex CCG
NHS Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG
NHS Wiltshire CCG
NHS Guildford and Waverley CCG
NHS North Somerset CCG
NHS South Worcestershire CCG
NHS South Warwickshire CCG
NHS South Norfolk CCG
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
Recorded Not recorded Exceptions reported
62
Percentage of patients on the CKD register whose notes have a record of a
urine albumin: creatinine ratio test in the preceding 12 months by CCG, 2014/15
Comparison with demographically similar CCGs
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
29
11
27
20
10
23
17
122
44
193
47
76
42
76
18
49
49
40
55
348
29
40
45
65
70
69
114
119
67
91
198
30
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
DR JONES J P & PTNRS C82077
DR KER D A J & PTNS (MARKET OVERTON) C82649
THE JUBILEE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82078
DR SHANKS M P & PTNRS C82112
NARBOROUGH HEALTH CENTRE C82119
EMPINGHAM MEDICAL CENTRE C82044
DR BHUTANI H C & PARTNER C82631
OAKHAM MEDICAL PRACTICE C82010
COUNTY PRACTICE C82042
DR JL HARRIS & PARTNERS C82038
NORTHFIELD MEDICAL CENTRE C82068
DR ROWLEY H A & PTNRS C82055
KIBWORTH HEALTH CENTRE C82001
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82025
LONG STREET SURGERY C82108
DR SHARP AJH & PARTNERS C82079
GLENFIELD SURGERY C82056
DR HOLLINGTON A & PTNS C82039
BUSHLOE END SURGERY C82013
MARKET HARBOROUGH MED.CTR C82009
DR S WOODING & PARTNERS C82016
DR AUSTIN M W E & PTNRS C82022
HUSBANDS BOSWORTH SURGERY C82109
DALBY DADGE MCCOLE & PARTNERS C82067
DR WATSON H J & PARTNERS C82098
DR ARAM G E & PTNRS C82002
DR KILPATRICK & PTNRS C82036
DR GRIFFIN B J & PARTNERS C82071
DR MASHARANI V C82611
DR KUNCEWICZ IR & PARTNERS C82021
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR C82066
DR SS CHOHAN & PARTNERS C82048
Not recorded Exceptions reported
63
Percentage of patients on the CKD register whose notes do not have a record of a
urine albumin: creatinine ratio test in the preceding 12 months by GP practice, 2014/15
• in total, including exceptions, there
are 2,233 people who have no record
of urine albumin:creatinine ratio test
• GP practice range: 9.5% to 44.1%
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
Heart
64 CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
Coronary Heart Disease is one of the principal causes of
premature death and disability. The key elements of management for
an individual who has already had a heart attack or angina are
symptom control and secondary prevention of further cardiovascular
events and premature mortality. There is robust evidence to support the
use of anti-platelet treatment, statins, beta-blockers and angiotensin
converting enzyme inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers. There is
also robust evidence to support good control of blood pressure. Each of
these interventions is incentivised in QOF but variation in achievement
and exception reporting at practice level shows that there is often
considerable potential for improving management and outcomes.
What might help 1. roll out of GRASP-Heart Failure audit tool
that identifies people with heart failure who
are undiagnosed or under treated
2. education for health professionals to
promote evidence based management of
CHD and high quality measurement of
blood pressure
3. ensure access to rapid access diagnostic
clinics and specialist support for
management of angina and heart failure
4. ensure access to cardiac rehab for
individuals with CHD and heart failure
What questions should we ask in our CCG? 1. for each indicator how wide is the variation in
achievement and exception reporting?
2. how many people would benefit if all
practices performed as well as the best?
3. how can we support practices who are
average and below average to perform as
well as the best in:
• more systematic delivery of evidence
based care for people with CHD
• improved detection and management
of heart failure
Heart failure is a common and an important complication of
coronary heart disease and other conditions. Appropriate treatment
including up-titration of ace inhibitors and beta blockers in heart failure
due to LVSD can significantly improve symptom control and quality of
life, and improve outcomes for patients. Despite this, around a quarter
of people with heart failure are undetected and untreated. And amongst
those who are diagnosed, there is significant variation in the quality of
care.
Management of Heart Disease
65 CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
Premature death and disability in people with
CHD can be reduced significantly by systematic
evidence based management in primary care
0.76%
0.68%
0.85%
1.02%
0.0% 0.2% 0.4% 0.6% 0.8% 1.0% 1.2%
England
NHS Leicester City CCG
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
0.76%
0.68%
0.85%
1.02%
0.0% 0.2% 0.4% 0.6% 0.8% 1.0% 1.2%
England
NHS Leicester City CCG
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
66
Heart failure prevalence by CCG
Comparison with CCGs in the STP
• prevalence of 0.85% in NHS East
Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
compared to 0.76% in England
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
0.52%
0.55%
0.62%
0.72%
0.78%
0.82%
0.85%
0.86%
0.87%
0.88%
0.93%
0.0% 0.1% 0.2% 0.3% 0.4% 0.5% 0.6% 0.7% 0.8% 0.9% 1.0%
NHS Surrey Downs CCG
NHS Guildford and Waverley CCG
NHS Mid Essex CCG
NHS Horsham and Mid Sussex CCG
NHS South Warwickshire CCG
NHS South Norfolk CCG
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
NHS Wiltshire CCG
NHS Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG
NHS North Somerset CCG
NHS South Worcestershire CCG
67
Heart failure prevalence by CCG
Comparison with demographically similar CCGs
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
0.4%
0.5%
0.5%
0.5%
0.6%
0.6%
0.6%
0.6%
0.6%
0.6%
0.7%
0.7%
0.7%
0.7%
0.8%
0.8%
0.8%
0.9%
0.9%
0.9%
0.9%
0.9%
0.9%
0.9%
0.9%
1.0%
1.1%
1.1%
1.1%
1.2%
1.2%
2.1%
0.0% 0.5% 1.0% 1.5% 2.0% 2.5%
DR KILPATRICK AND PARTNERS C82036
KIBWORTH HEALTH CENTRE C82001
LONG CLAWSON MEDICAL PRACTICE C82016
THE LIMES MEDICAL CENTRE C82055
NARBOROUGH HEALTH CENTRE C82119
THE MASHARANI PRACTICE C82611
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82025
COUNTESTHORPE HEALTH CENTRE C82002
COUNTY PRACTICE C82042
THE BILLESDON SURGERY C82022
ENDERBY MEDICAL CENTRE C82631
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR C82066
KINGSWAY SURGERY C82039
GLENFIELD SURGERY C82056
WIGSTON CENTRAL SURGERY C82071
MARKET OVERTON & SOMERBY SURGERIES C82649
THE JUBILEE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82078
EMPINGHAM MEDICAL CENTRE C82044
THE CROFT MEDICAL CENTRE C82067
SEVERN SURGERY C82112
THE CENTRAL SURGERY C82021
MARKET HARBOROUGH MED.CTR C82009
LONG STREET SURGERY C82108
NORTHFIELD MEDICAL CENTRE C82068
HAZELMERE MEDICAL CENTRE C82098
LATHAM HOUSE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82038
THE HUSBANDS BOSWORTH SURGERY C82109
ROSEMEAD DRIVE SURGERY C82048
SOUTH WIGSTON HEALTH CTR. C82079
OAKHAM MEDICAL PRACTICE C82010
THE UPPINGHAM SURGERY C82077
BUSHLOE SURGERY C82013
GP practice CCG
68
Heart failure prevalence by GP practice
• 2,772 people with diagnosed heart
failure in NHS East Leicestershire
and Rutland CCG
• GP practice range: 0.4% to 2.1%
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
84.7%
84.7%
86.1%
87.0%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
England
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
NHS Leicester City CCG
Treatment No treatment Exceptions reported
69
Percentage of patients with heart failure due to left ventricular systolic dysfunction
(LVSD) who are treated with ACE-I / ARB by CCG
Comparison with CCGs in the STP
• 503 people with heart failure* with
LVSD in NHS East Leicestershire and
Rutland CCG
• 426 (84.7%) people treated with ACE-
I or ARB
• 77 (15.3%) people who are
exceptions
• 0 (0%) additional people who are not
treated with ACE-I or ARB
*Using the QOF clinical indicator HF003
denominator plus exceptions
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
81.9%
82.1%
82.6%
82.9%
83.4%
84.2%
84.5%
84.7%
85.0%
85.9%
88.8%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
NHS Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG
NHS Surrey Downs CCG
NHS Horsham and Mid Sussex CCG
NHS Mid Essex CCG
NHS South Warwickshire CCG
NHS North Somerset CCG
NHS South Worcestershire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
NHS Wiltshire CCG
NHS South Norfolk CCG
NHS Guildford and Waverley CCG
Treatment No treatment Exceptions reported
70
Percentage of patients with heart failure due to left ventricular systolic dysfunction
(LVSD) who are treated with ACE-I / ARB by CCG
Comparison with demographically similar CCGs
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
1
2
1
1
6
3
3
3
6
9
5
3
2
2
6
1
4
5
4
4
4
2
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
LONG STREET SURGERY C82108
ENDERBY MEDICAL CENTRE C82631
THE MASHARANI PRACTICE C82611
NARBOROUGH HEALTH CENTRE C82119
THE HUSBANDS BOSWORTH SURGERY C82109
SOUTH WIGSTON HEALTH CTR. C82079
THE JUBILEE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82078
NORTHFIELD MEDICAL CENTRE C82068
ROSEMEAD DRIVE SURGERY C82048
KIBWORTH HEALTH CENTRE C82001
HAZELMERE MEDICAL CENTRE C82098
EMPINGHAM MEDICAL CENTRE C82044
DR KILPATRICK AND PARTNERS C82036
KINGSWAY SURGERY C82039
LATHAM HOUSE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82038
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82025
OAKHAM MEDICAL PRACTICE C82010
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR C82066
BUSHLOE SURGERY C82013
THE UPPINGHAM SURGERY C82077
MARKET HARBOROUGH MED.CTR C82009
THE CENTRAL SURGERY C82021
GLENFIELD SURGERY C82056
LONG CLAWSON MEDICAL PRACTICE C82016
COUNTESTHORPE HEALTH CENTRE C82002
THE LIMES MEDICAL CENTRE C82055
MARKET OVERTON & SOMERBY SURGERIES C82649
WIGSTON CENTRAL SURGERY C82071
COUNTY PRACTICE C82042
SEVERN SURGERY C82112
THE BILLESDON SURGERY C82022
THE CROFT MEDICAL CENTRE C82067
No treatment Exceptions reported
71
Percentage of patients with heart failure due to left ventricular systolic dysfunction
(LVSD) who are not treated with ACE-I / ARB by GP practice
• in total, including exceptions, there
are 77 people who are not treated
with ACE-I or ARB
• GP practice range: 0.0% to 40.0%
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
77.7%
77.2%
78.5%
79.4%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
England
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
NHS Leicester City CCG
Treatment No treatment Exceptions reported
72
Percentage of patients with heart failure due to left ventricular systolic dysfunction (LVSD)
who are treated with ACE-I / ARB and BB by CCG
Comparison with CCGs in the STP
• 426 people with heart failure* with
LVSD treated with ACE-I/ARB in NHS
East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
• 329 (77.2%) people treated with ACE-
I/ARB and BB
• 65 (15.3%) people who are
exceptions
• 32 (7.5%) additional people who are
not treated with ACE-I/ARB and BB
*Using the QOF clinical indicator HF004
denominator plus exceptions
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
68.8%
71.2%
71.5%
71.9%
72.9%
74.4%
75.9%
76.9%
77.2%
77.4%
79.9%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
NHS South Norfolk CCG
NHS Surrey Downs CCG
NHS Wiltshire CCG
NHS South Warwickshire CCG
NHS Mid Essex CCG
NHS South Worcestershire CCG
NHS Guildford and Waverley CCG
NHS Horsham and Mid Sussex CCG
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
NHS Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG
NHS North Somerset CCG
Treatment No treatment Exceptions reported
73
Percentage of patients with heart failure due to left ventricular systolic dysfunction (LVSD)
who are treated with ACE-I / ARB and BB by CCG
Comparison with demographically similar CCGs
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
1
1
3
1
1
8
4
2
5
4
3
2
11
3
4
1
2
3
5
11
3
1
4
6
3
5
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
LONG STREET SURGERY C82108
NARBOROUGH HEALTH CENTRE C82119
THE JUBILEE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82078
THE CROFT MEDICAL CENTRE C82067
THE LIMES MEDICAL CENTRE C82055
ROSEMEAD DRIVE SURGERY C82048
DR KILPATRICK AND PARTNERS C82036
GLENFIELD SURGERY C82056
COUNTESTHORPE HEALTH CENTRE C82002
ENDERBY MEDICAL CENTRE C82631
KIBWORTH HEALTH CENTRE C82001
LATHAM HOUSE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82038
EMPINGHAM MEDICAL CENTRE C82044
COUNTY PRACTICE C82042
MARKET HARBOROUGH MED.CTR C82009
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82025
THE CENTRAL SURGERY C82021
KINGSWAY SURGERY C82039
THE UPPINGHAM SURGERY C82077
WIGSTON CENTRAL SURGERY C82071
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR C82066
SOUTH WIGSTON HEALTH CTR. C82079
LONG CLAWSON MEDICAL PRACTICE C82016
MARKET OVERTON & SOMERBY SURGERIES C82649
OAKHAM MEDICAL PRACTICE C82010
BUSHLOE SURGERY C82013
SEVERN SURGERY C82112
THE HUSBANDS BOSWORTH SURGERY C82109
NORTHFIELD MEDICAL CENTRE C82068
HAZELMERE MEDICAL CENTRE C82098
THE MASHARANI PRACTICE C82611
THE BILLESDON SURGERY C82022
No treatment Exceptions reported
74
Percentage of patients with heart failure due to left ventricular systolic dysfunction (LVSD) who
are not treated with ACE-I / ARB and BB by GP practice
• in total, including exceptions, there
are 97 people who are not treated
with ACE-I or ARB
• GP practice range: 0.0% to 62.5%
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
88.2%
87.0%
87.7%
88.7%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
England
NHS Leicester City CCG
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
Below 150/90 Not below 150/90 Exceptions reported
75
Percentage of patients with CHD whose blood pressure reading
(measured in the preceding 12 months) is 150/90 mmHg or less by CCG
Comparison with CCGs in the STP
*Using the QOF clinical indicator CHD002
denominator plus exceptions
• 10,564 people with coronary heart
disease* in NHS East Leicestershire
and Rutland CCG
• 9,261 (87.7%) people whose blood
pressure <= 150 / 90
• 492 (4.7%) people who are
exceptions
• 811 (7.7%) additional people whose
blood pressure is not <= 150 / 90
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
84.8%
85.9%
87.0%
87.6%
87.7%
87.7%
88.6%
89.3%
89.6%
91.0%
91.5%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
NHS Surrey Downs CCG
NHS Guildford and Waverley CCG
NHS Mid Essex CCG
NHS Wiltshire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
NHS Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG
NHS South Norfolk CCG
NHS Horsham and Mid Sussex CCG
NHS North Somerset CCG
NHS South Warwickshire CCG
NHS South Worcestershire CCG
Below 150/90 Not below 150/90 Exceptions reported
76
Percentage of patients with CHD whose blood pressure reading
(measured in the preceding 12 months) is 150/90 mmHg or less by CCG
Comparison with demographically similar CCGs
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
5
7
28
28
29
20
20
112
12
47
68
12
36
8
28
47
16
41
63
60
47
33
123
40
48
29
27
63
58
60
64
24
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
MARKET OVERTON & SOMERBY SURGERIES C82649
SEVERN SURGERY C82112
THE LIMES MEDICAL CENTRE C82055
THE UPPINGHAM SURGERY C82077
COUNTY PRACTICE C82042
EMPINGHAM MEDICAL CENTRE C82044
KIBWORTH HEALTH CENTRE C82001
LATHAM HOUSE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82038
ENDERBY MEDICAL CENTRE C82631
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR C82066
OAKHAM MEDICAL PRACTICE C82010
THE HUSBANDS BOSWORTH SURGERY C82109
COUNTESTHORPE HEALTH CENTRE C82002
NARBOROUGH HEALTH CENTRE C82119
HAZELMERE MEDICAL CENTRE C82098
NORTHFIELD MEDICAL CENTRE C82068
THE MASHARANI PRACTICE C82611
THE JUBILEE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82078
GLENFIELD SURGERY C82056
BUSHLOE SURGERY C82013
THE CENTRAL SURGERY C82021
THE BILLESDON SURGERY C82022
MARKET HARBOROUGH MED.CTR C82009
SOUTH WIGSTON HEALTH CTR. C82079
THE CROFT MEDICAL CENTRE C82067
LONG CLAWSON MEDICAL PRACTICE C82016
ROSEMEAD DRIVE SURGERY C82048
DR KILPATRICK AND PARTNERS C82036
KINGSWAY SURGERY C82039
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82025
WIGSTON CENTRAL SURGERY C82071
LONG STREET SURGERY C82108
Not below 150/90 Exceptions reported
77
Percentage of patients with CHD whose blood pressure reading
(measured in the preceding 12 months) is not 150/90 mmHg or less by GP practice
• in total, including exceptions, there
are 1,303 people whose blood
pressure is not <= 150 / 90
• GP practice range: 4.5% to 25.3%
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
17
34
16
31
16
30
32
23
19
17
14
5
3
7
1
-20%-15%-10%-5%0%5%
LONG STREET SURGERY
WIGSTON CENTRAL SURGERY
ROSEMEAD DRIVE SURGERY
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE
LONG CLAWSON MEDICAL PRACTICE
KINGSWAY SURGERY
DR KILPATRICK AND PARTNERS
THE CROFT MEDICAL CENTRE
SOUTH WIGSTON HEALTH CTR.
THE BILLESDON SURGERY
OAKHAM MEDICAL PRACTICE
KIBWORTH HEALTH CENTRE
EMPINGHAM MEDICAL CENTRE
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR
LATHAM HOUSE MEDICAL PRACTICE
COUNTY PRACTICE
THE UPPINGHAM SURGERY
SEVERN SURGERY
THE LIMES MEDICAL CENTRE
MARKET OVERTON & SOMERBY SURGERIES
78
Percentage of patients with CHD whose blood pressure reading (measured
in the preceding 12 months) is not 150/90 mmHg or less by GP practice –
opportunities compared to GP cluster
• using the GP cluster method of
calculating potential gains, if each
practice was to achieve as well as the
upper quartile of its national cluster,
then an additional 439 people would
be treated
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
Details of this methodology are available on slide
9. Click here to view them.
91.8%
89.9%
92.1%
92.8%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
England
NHS Leicester City CCG
NHS East Leicestershire And Rutland CCG
NHS West Leicestershire CCG
Optimal management No treatment Exceptions reported
79
Percentage of patients with CHD with a record in the preceding 12 months that aspirin,
an alternative anti-platelet therapy, or an anti-coagulant is being taken by CCG
Comparison with CCGs in the STP
*Using the QOF clinical indicator CHD005
denominator plus exceptions
• 10,564 people with coronary heart
disease* in NHS East Leicestershire
and Rutland CCG
• 9,730 (92.1%) people who are taking
aspirin, an alternative anti-platelet
therapy, or an anti-coagulant
• 473 (4.5%) people who are
exceptions
• 361 (3.4%) additional people who are
not taking aspirin, an alternative anti-
platelet therapy, or an anti-coagulant
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
90.0%
90.5%
90.8%
90.8%
91.5%
91.7%
91.7%
92.1%
92.1%
92.3%
92.9%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
NHS Mid Essex CCG
NHS Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG
NHS Wiltshire CCG
NHS Surrey Downs CCG
NHS Guildford and Waverley CCG
NHS Horsham and Mid Sussex CCG
NHS South Norfolk CCG
NHS South Warwickshire CCG
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG
NHS North Somerset CCG
NHS South Worcestershire CCG
Optimal management No treatment Exceptions reported
80
Percentage of patients with CHD with a record in the preceding 12 months that aspirin,
an alternative anti-platelet therapy, or an anti-coagulant is being taken by CCG
Comparison with demographically similar CCGs
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
14
17
6
7
19
66
13
23
19
22
12
24
58
17
18
18
39
32
14
38
6
10
34
45
12
35
68
38
29
44
15
22
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
COUNTY PRACTICE C82042
NORTHFIELD MEDICAL CENTRE C82068
MARKET OVERTON & SOMERBY SURGERIES C82649
SEVERN SURGERY C82112
THE CENTRAL SURGERY C82021
LATHAM HOUSE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82038
KIBWORTH HEALTH CENTRE C82001
THE UPPINGHAM SURGERY C82077
THE CROFT MEDICAL CENTRE C82067
THE JUBILEE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82078
LONG CLAWSON MEDICAL PRACTICE C82016
WIGSTON CENTRAL SURGERY C82071
MARKET HARBOROUGH MED.CTR C82009
EMPINGHAM MEDICAL CENTRE C82044
HAZELMERE MEDICAL CENTRE C82098
THE BILLESDON SURGERY C82022
GLENFIELD SURGERY C82056
THE LIMES MEDICAL CENTRE C82055
ROSEMEAD DRIVE SURGERY C82048
BUSHLOE SURGERY C82013
NARBOROUGH HEALTH CENTRE C82119
THE HUSBANDS BOSWORTH SURGERY C82109
DR KILPATRICK AND PARTNERS C82036
FOREST HOUSE MEDICAL CTR C82066
ENDERBY MEDICAL CENTRE C82631
COUNTESTHORPE HEALTH CENTRE C82002
OAKHAM MEDICAL PRACTICE C82010
THE WYCLIFFE MEDICAL PRACTICE C82025
SOUTH WIGSTON HEALTH CTR. C82079
KINGSWAY SURGERY C82039
LONG STREET SURGERY C82108
THE MASHARANI PRACTICE C82611
No treatment Exceptions reported
81
Percentage of patients with CHD without a record in the preceding 12 months that aspirin,
an alternative anti-platelet therapy, or an anti-coagulant is being taken by GP practice
• in total, including exceptions, there
are 834 people are not taking aspirin,
an alternative anti-platelet therapy, or
an anti-coagulant
• GP practice range: 3.8% to 16.7%
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
Some data on outcomes for people with
cardiovascular disease
82 CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
2002/032003/042004/052005/062006/072007/082008/092009/102010/112011/122012/132013/142014/152015/16
Ag
e s
tand
ard
ise
d r
ate
(p
er
100
,00
0)
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG England
83
Hospital admissions for coronary heart disease for all ages 2002/03 – 2015/16
Source: Hospital Episode Statistics (HES), 2002/03 - 2015/16, Copyright © 2017, Re‐used with the permission of NHS Digital. All rights reserved
• in NHS East Leicestershire and
Rutland CCG, the hospital admission
rate for coronary heart disease in
2015/16 was 411.2 (1,422) compared
to 527.9 for England
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
200
2002/032003/042004/052005/062006/072007/082008/092009/102010/112011/122012/132013/142014/152015/16
Age s
tandard
ised r
ate
(p
er
100,0
00)
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG England
84
Hospital admissions for stroke for all ages 2002/03 – 2015/16
Source: Hospital Episode Statistics (HES), 2002/03 - 2015/16, Copyright © 2017, Re‐used with the permission of NHS Digital. All rights reserved
• in NHS East Leicestershire and
Rutland CCG, the hospital admission
rate for stroke in 2015/16 was 160.6
(564) compared to 172.8 for England
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
293.0%
753.5%
445.8%
81.3%
150.0%
108.6%
136.8%
243.4%
726.5%
416.2%
68.2%
174.7%
116.8%
141.3%
0% 100% 200% 300% 400% 500% 600% 700% 800%
RRT
Minor amputation
Major amputation
Stroke
Heart failure
Heart Attack
Angina
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG England
85
Additional risk of complications for people with diabetes, three year follow up, 2013/14
Note: This slide uses data from the National
Diabetes Audit (NDA)
• The risk of a stroke was 68.2% higher
and the risk of a heart attack was
116.8% higher compared to people
without diabetes. The risk of a major
amputation was 416.2% higher.
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
2002-04 2003-05 2004-06 2005-07 2006-08 2007-09 2008-10 2009-11 2010-12 2011-13 2012-14 2013-15
Ag
e s
tand
ard
ise
d r
ate
(p
er
100
0,0
00
)
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG England
86
Deaths from coronary heart disease, under 75s
Source: Office for National Statistics (ONS) mortality data 2002 - 2015
• in NHS East Leicestershire and
Rutland CCG, the early mortality rate
for coronary heart disease in 2013-15
was 34.1, compared to 40.6 for
England
CVD: Primary Care Intelligence Packs
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
2002-04 2003-05 2004-06 2005-07 2006-08 2007-09 2008-10 2009-11 2010-12 2011-13 2012-14 2013-15
Ag
e s
tand
ard
ise
d r
ate
(p
er
100
,00
0)
NHS East Leicestershire and Rutland CCG England
87
Deaths from stroke, under 75s
Source: Office for National Statistics (ONS) mortality data 2002 - 2015
• in NHS East Leicestershire and
Rutland CCG, the early mortality rate
for stroke in 2013-15 was 9.1,
compared to 13.6 for England
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Appendix Data sources
• Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF), 2015/16, Copyright © 2016, re-used with the permission of NHS Digital. All rights
reserved
• Non-diabetic hyperglycaemia prevalence estimates, NCVIN, PHE: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/nhs-diabetes-
prevention-programme-non-diabetic-hyperglycaemia
• Diabetes prevalence estimates, NCVIN, PHE: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/diabetes-prevalence-estimates-for-
local-populations
• CKD Prevalence model, G.Aitken, University of Southampton , 2014 https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/ckd-
prevalence-estimates-for-local-and-regional-populations
• Hypertension prevalence estimates for local CCG populations. Created using data from: QOF hypertension registers 2014/15
and; Undiagnosed hypertension estimates for adults 16 years and older. 2014. Department of Primary Care & Public Health,
Imperial College London https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/hypertension-prevalence-estimates-for-local-populations
• NHS Stop smoking services Copyright © 2014, NHS Digital
• Norberg J, Bäckström S , Jansson J-H, Johansson L. Estimating the prevalence of atrial fibrillation in a general population
using validated electronic health data. Clin Epidemiol 2013 ; 5 475 – 81.
• National Diabetes Audit, 2013/14 and 2015/16, Copyright © 2016, re-used with the permission of NHS Digital. All rights
reserved
• Hospital Episode Statistics (HES), 2002/03 - 2015/16, Copyright © 2017, Re‐used with the permission of NHS Digital. All rights
reserved
• Office for National Statistics (ONS) mortality data 2002 – 2015, Copyright © 2017, Re-used with the permission of the Office for
National Statistics. All rights reserved
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