Adam Rachel
Centre for Research on Families and Relationships, the University of Edinburgh, 23 Buccleuch Place, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK.
Osteopath Med Prim Care. 2007 Aug 31;1:13. doi: 10.1186/1750-4732-1-13.
Recent policy and organisational changes within UK primary care have emphasised graduated access to care, speed of access to the first available general practitioner (GP) and care being provided by a range of healthcare professionals. These trends have been strengthened by the current GP contract and Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF). Concern has been expressed that the potential for personal care is being diminished as a result and that this will reduce quality standards. This paper presents data from a study that explored with patients and GPs what personal care means and whether it has continuing importance to them.
A semi-structured questionnaire was used to interview participants and Framework Analysis supported analysis of emerging themes. Twenty-nine patients, mainly women with young children, and twenty-three GPs were interviewed from seven practices in Lothian, Scotland, ranged by practice size and relative deprivation score.
Personal care was defined mainly, though not exclusively, as care given within the context of a continuing relationship in which there is an interpersonal connection and the doctor adopts a particular consultation style. Defined in this way, it was reported to have benefits for both health outcomes and patients' experience of care. In particular, such care was thought to be beneficial in attending to the emotions that can be elicited when seeking and receiving health care and in enabling patients to be known by doctors as legitimate seekers of care from the health service. Its importance was described as being dependent upon the nature of the health problem and patients' wider familial and social circumstances. In particular, it was found to provide support to patients in their parenting and other familial caring roles.
Personal care has continuing salience to patients and GPs in modern primary care in the UK. Patients equate the experience of care, not just outcomes, with high quality care. As it is mainly conceptualised and experienced as care within the context of a continuing relationship, policies and organisational arrangements that support and give incentives to this must be in place. These preferences are not strongly reflected in the QOF. Specific questions need to be addressed by future audit and research on the impact of the contract on these aspects of service.
英国初级医疗保健领域近期的政策和组织变革强调了分级诊疗、尽快预约到首位全科医生(GP)以及由一系列医疗保健专业人员提供护理。当前的全科医生合同和质量与结果框架(QOF)强化了这些趋势。有人担心,个人化护理的可能性因此而降低,这将导致质量标准下降。本文呈现了一项研究的数据,该研究探讨了患者和全科医生对个人化护理的理解以及它对他们是否仍然重要。
使用半结构化问卷对参与者进行访谈,并采用框架分析法支持对新出现主题的分析。从苏格兰洛锡安地区的7家诊所选取了29名患者(主要是有年幼子女的女性)和23名全科医生进行访谈,这些诊所按规模和相对贫困得分排序。
个人化护理主要(但不限于)被定义为在持续关系背景下提供的护理,这种关系中存在人际联系,医生采用特定的诊疗方式。如此定义的话,据报道它对健康结果和患者的护理体验都有好处。特别是,这种护理被认为有助于处理在寻求和接受医疗保健时可能引发的情绪,并使医生了解患者是医疗服务的合理寻求者。其重要性被描述为取决于健康问题的性质以及患者更广泛的家庭和社会环境。特别是,它被发现能在患者育儿及其他家庭护理角色方面为他们提供支持。
在英国现代初级医疗保健中,个人化护理对患者和全科医生仍然具有重要意义。患者将护理体验,而非仅仅是结果,等同于高质量护理。由于它主要被概念化为并体验为持续关系背景下的护理,必须有支持并激励这种护理的政策和组织安排。这些偏好并未在QOF中得到强烈体现。未来关于合同对服务这些方面影响的审计和研究需要解决一些具体问题。