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Enhancing understanding of interventions to increase relational continuity in general practice: a realist review protocol

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posted on 2025-09-26, 13:50 authored by S Engamba, J Smith, N Khan, K Sidaway-Lee, P Burch, T Marshall, P Evans, D Pereira Gray, R Anderson
BACKGROUND: Relational continuity of care (RCC), which is characterised by an ongoing therapeutic relationship between patients and their primary care providers, is critical for ensuring high-quality care in general practice. Despite its importance, challenges such as staffing shortages, policy shifts, and evolving patient needs often impede its consistent delivery. With the new GP contract in England highlighting the need for primary care providers to monitor and deliver relational continuity, it is more than ever crucial to understand how best to achieve it. AIM: This realist review aims to explore how, why, and under what conditions interventions to improve relational continuity are successfully implemented in general practice. DESIGN & SETTING: The review will be supported by an expert stakeholder panel and a patient advisory group to consider the diverse and dynamic settings of general practice, and generate contexts, mechanisms and outcomes configurations exploring how interventions to enhance RCC in general practice work. METHOD: Through the synthesis of diverse international evidence sources, including qualitative, quantitative, mixed-methods studies, and grey literature, the review will develop an understanding of the mechanisms that produce relational continuity, the contexts in which these mechanisms operate, and the outcomes they produce for the health system, practices, practitioners, and patients. CONCLUSION: The findings will provide data to inform future research and refine strategies and policies that support the effective delivery of relational continuity, which in turn may lead to improved patient outcomes and enhanced care experiences.<p></p>

Funding

C130SENGAMBA

National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR)

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Rights

© 2025, The Authors. This article is Open Access: CC BY license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

Submission date

2025-06-19

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. the final version is available on open access from the Royal College of General Practitioners via the DOI in this record.

Journal

BJGP Open

Publisher

Royal College of General Practitioners

Place published

England

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2025-08-21T09:27:40Z

FOA date

21/08/2025 10:30

Citation

Published online 1 August 2025

Department

  • Health and Community Sciences

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