Centre for Primary Care, Institute of Population Health, University of Manchester 5th floor, Williamson Building, Oxford Road, Manchester, UK.
Br J Gen Pract. 2013 Mar;63(608):e192-9. doi: 10.3399/bjgp13X664243.
UK health policy aims to reduce the use of unscheduled care, by increasing proactive and preventative management of patients with long-term conditions in primary care.
The study explored healthcare professionals' understanding of why patients with long-term conditions use unscheduled care, and the healthcare professionals' understanding of their role in relation to reducing the use of unscheduled care.
Qualitative study interviewing different types of healthcare professionals providing primary care or unscheduled care services in northwest England.
Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 29 healthcare professionals (six GPs; five out-of-hours GPs; four emergency department doctors; two practice nurses; three specialist nurses; two district nurses; seven active case managers). Data were analysed using framework analysis.
Healthcare professionals viewed the use of unscheduled care as a necessary component of care for patients with long-term conditions. Those whose roles involved working to targets to reduce the use of unscheduled care described a tension between this and delivering optimum patient care. Three approaches to reducing unscheduled care were described: optimising the system; negotiating the system; and optimising the patient.
Current policy to reduce the use of unscheduled care does not take account of the perceptions of the healthcare professionals who are expected to implement them. Lipsky's theory of street-level bureaucrats provides a framework to understand how healthcare professionals respond to imposed policies. Healthcare professionals did not see the use of unscheduled care as a problem and there was limited commitment to the policy targets. Therefore, policy should aim for whole-system change rather than reliance on individual healthcare professionals to make changes in their practice.
英国的卫生政策旨在减少非计划性医疗服务的使用,通过在初级保健中对患有长期疾病的患者进行积极主动和预防管理来实现。
本研究探讨了医疗保健专业人员对长期疾病患者使用非计划性医疗服务的原因的理解,以及他们对自身在减少非计划性医疗服务使用方面的角色的理解。
在英格兰西北部,对提供初级保健或非计划性医疗服务的不同类型的医疗保健专业人员进行定性研究访谈。
对 29 名医疗保健专业人员(6 名全科医生;5 名非工作时间的全科医生;4 名急诊医生;2 名执业护士;3 名专科护士;2 名地区护士;7 名主动病例管理者)进行半结构化访谈。使用框架分析对数据进行分析。
医疗保健专业人员认为,非计划性医疗服务是长期疾病患者护理的必要组成部分。那些其角色涉及针对减少非计划性医疗服务使用的目标工作的人员,描述了这与提供最佳患者护理之间的紧张关系。描述了减少非计划性医疗服务的三种方法:优化系统;协商系统;优化患者。
当前减少非计划性医疗服务的政策并未考虑到预期实施这些政策的医疗保健专业人员的看法。利普斯基的街头官僚理论为理解医疗保健专业人员对强制政策的反应提供了一个框架。医疗保健专业人员并没有将非计划性医疗服务的使用视为一个问题,并且对政策目标的承诺有限。因此,政策应该旨在实现整个系统的变革,而不是依赖个别医疗保健专业人员在其实践中做出改变。