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The relationship between people with BPD and GPs: Analysis of NI patient Health and Social Care data
Safe People
Organisation name
Ulster University
Organisation sector
Academic Institute
Applicant name(s)
Gerry Leavey
Safe Projects
Project ID
E009
Lay summary
Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a highly prevalent condition. The condition is characterised by impulsivity, unstable emotions and difficulties forming interpersonal relationships. There is evidence to say that people with BPD are high users of health care services, including primary, secondary and emergency services. Many BPD patients are prescribed numerous non-evidence based medications. They have numerous poor physical and mental healthcare outcomes including high rates of completed suicide and suicide attempts (including deliberate self-harm). Healthcare professionals have reported this patient group as being difficult to deal with, often leading to patients being removed from GP registers either voluntarily or involuntarily. The high utilisation of health care services and the high level of dysfunction caused by this patient group pose an enormous economic and social burden on society. This project is a cross sectional study exploring the determinants affecting the relationship between people with BPD and General Practitioners (GP’s) in Northern Ireland. There is no direct means of measuring the GP-patient relationship. Data provided by the Honest Broker Service will be analysed to make inferences about the relationship between people with BPD and GPs by analysing proxy indicators that could portray a poor GP-patient relationship. In this study we will explore the effect that GP and patient characteristics have on the following outcomes: a) Admission rates to secondary care services b) Admission rates to emergency services c) Involuntary admissions to secondary care services d) Deduction (exclusion) rates from GP registers e) GP prescribing patterns
Public benefit statement
The high utilisation of health care services and the high level of dysfunction caused by this patient group pose an enormous economic and social burden on society. This project is a cross sectional study exploring the determinants affecting the relationship between people with BPD and General Practitioners (GP’s) in Northern Ireland.
Latest approval date
06/10/2015
Safe Data
Dataset(s) name
Safe Setting
Access type
TRE