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The NHS 10-Year Plan aims to shift healthcare closer to communities, supporting people earlier and preventing illness. To achieve this, Population Health Management (PHM) must become the backbone of smarter, more proactive care at a neighbourhood level.

PHM uses existing care data to identify needs early, enabling targeted action rather than generic responses. Done effectively, it helps practices, PCNs and Neighbourhoods to understand exactly who requires support and what that support should look like.

In our recent webinar, Population Health expert Jeremy Martin, and GP and Medical Director, Dr Lauren Parry from Taurus Healthcare joined us at Redmoor Health and Primary Care Analytics, to explore tools to help understand the data and suggest practical examples of how PHM is already transforming care.

Risk Stratification – how are you segmenting your population?

Jeremy Martin offered insights into various risk stratification tools and opportunities, either aimed at reducing inappropriate hospital admissions or better managing long term conditions. This would be alongside targeting prevention interventions for cohorts of patients, e.g. those at risk of falls or increasing frailty.

Populations can be categorised or segmented in numerous ways, this involves identification, prioritisation, and selecting manageable cohorts to support through targeted interventions. Cohorts can be identified through clinical judgment, rule based stratification, right through to predictive modelling and new AI analytical tools to manage large quantities of data and increase predictive power.

What PHM Looks Like in Practice

Dr Lauren Parry gave several powerful examples of what PHM looks like in action:

Public Health Screening- Closing Gaps in Cervical Screening
In Herefordshire, headline cervical screening rates looked strong. But when they looked through the lens of health inequalities and broke down the data by ethnicity, they found that Indian, Pakistani, and Bangladeshi women were being missed. By combining GP data across the county and working with local communities, they increased uptake and improved equality of access without needing to overhaul their entire system.

Reducing Pressure from Repeated Admissions
Health Systems often focus on hospital pressures as a priority, and all want to reduce the number of people attending A&E inappropriately or being admitted multiple times. A neighbourhood review of older patients who had been admitted to hospital three or more times revealed that needs varied significantly between PCNs. One PCN was admitting patients with lower frailty scores, but higher deprivation. Another had more severely frail patients but less intensive support. Tailored plans were then developed to better align workforce, continuity of care, and home-based alternatives for the most at-risk groups.

Through the lens of Long Term Conditions – Managing Fibromyalgia More Effectively
One PCN used PHM tools to identify patients with fibromyalgia who were booking high numbers of GP appointments, but reporting low satisfaction. By building a cohort of 96 patients and offering tailored education and care plans, they reduced appointment burden and improved patient experience. This wasn’t about rationing appointments. It was about giving people the right kind of support, in a more structured way.

Combining GP care and Rebalancing Specialist Demand
Local data showed that patients with heart failure and high frailty scores were waiting too long to see cardiologists. Yet geriatricians had available capacity. By shifting appropriate patients into geriatric clinics instead, they reduced waiting times, freed up cardiology slots, and provided more holistic care.

Continuity of Care vs Access – Planning for Housebound Patients
Some of the highest-need patients were being seen most frequently, but often without continuity or a clear plan. These patients were on duty Dr lists, passed between clinicians, and generated large volumes of patient admin. Using PHM dashboards, practices identified these cohorts and changed their approach, allocating named clinicians and structured visits.

Each of these examples used existing practice-level data. The difference was the mindset and the structure to interrogate it properly.

How to Get Started

If you’re looking to apply PHM in your neighbourhood or PCN, here are some practical ways to begin:

1

Focus on a specific goal

Start by asking what you want to improve. Do you want to reduce inappropriate emergency admissions? Boost screening in underserved groups? Improve outcomes for high-intensity patients with long-term conditions? Be clear about the outcome, then shape your analysis around that. The data can help you, but most of your teams will have knowledge about the population that ‘feel’ as if their needs are not being met well.
2

Build your first cohort

You don’t need complex tech to get started. Often your clinical system contains population level data, beyond just QOF contract searches. Sharing and using EMIS or SystmOne searches at a greater scale across your PCN or Neighbourhood together, can help you to think differently about your neighbourhoods service design. You will see the variation across your place and can factor in how geography may impact across other community service provision. Start with groups such as:

– Patients over 65 with three or more A&E admissions in the past year
– Adults with diabetes who haven’t had a review in the last 12 months
– Patients with COPD who were admitted to hospital last winter
– Young people with rising BMI scores and low engagement

3

Make sure the data leads to action

Use risk stratification to guide Multi-Disciplinary Teams (MDTs), schedule proactive reviews, or design targeted communications. For example, patients at risk of falls could be offered a home safety check and equipment fitting. Women missing cervical screening could be contacted in their preferred language with culturally representative images.
4

Use visual tools to build shared ownership

Data isn’t everyone’s specialism, so use visual dashboards that benchmark practices across a PCN to enable clear prioritisation and collective decision-making. Redmoor’s D&T Hub provides maturity assessments and benchmarking tools specifically within the ‘Demand & Capacity’ module, helping teams align effectively and objectively. For practices looking to enhance their PHM capabilities further, our partnership with Primary Care Analytics offers advanced dashboard solutions and analytical support to help you prioritise your interventions – get in touch with our team to learn more.
5

Don’t get stuck in pilot mode

The most effective PCNs are the ones treating this as operational infrastructure, not a one-off initiative. Repeat your cohort reviews regularly. Use shared goals to align staff training, digital messaging, and proactive outreach. Measure the impact and refine your approach.

Moving from Insight to Delivery

PHM is already part of the GP contract as a key focus for PCNs and it’s referenced throughout the NHS 10-Year Plan. It’s the only realistic way for Integrated Neighbourhood Teams to make the best use of their people, budgets, and time.

By combining clinical insight with data, PCNs can move from reacting to demand toward managing it or better still preventing illness. That means fewer crises, fewer missed opportunities, and more care delivered in ways that matter to the people receiving it.

To view the full webinar or access practical tools to get started, join the Redmoor Digital & Transformation Network. You’ll find templates, dashboards, case studies, and peer support to help you go from intention to impact.

Clare Temple

Blog by Clare Temple – Product Manager

Clare has been the lead administrator in a rural GP Practice for six years until joining the Redmoor team, where she has focused on implementing new digital solutions and techniques. These include Online Consultations, GP Online Services and website administration, where Clare has focused on making patient communications and flows more efficient. Clare has helped practices to develop things such as their appointment books, summary records, and optimise their clinical system, and is now using this knowledge to develop the Digital Journey Planner with Redmoor Health – which is all about supporting practices on their digital journeys. Clare understands the pressures that GPs are under at the moment and advocates the value that digital solutions can provide in easing some of this pressure.

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