Webster Fiona, Bremner Samantha, Katz Joel, Watt-Watson Judy, Kennedy Deborah, Sawhney Mona, McCartney Colin
Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON.
Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine, McMaster University Hamilton, ON.
Healthc Policy. 2014 Feb;9(3):55-66.
Ontario has introduced strategies over the past decade to reduce wait times and length of stay and improve access to physiotherapy for orthopaedic and other patients. The aim of this study is to explore patients' experiences of joint replacement care during a significant system change in their care setting.
A secondary analysis was done on semi-structured qualitative interviews that were conducted in 2009 with 12 individuals who had undergone at least two hip or knee replacements five years apart at a specialized orthopaedic centre in Ontario, Canada. Interview transcripts were coded and then organized into themes.
Although the original study aimed to capture participants' experiences with changes in anaesthetic technique between their first and second joint replacements, the participants described several unrelated differences in the care they received during this period. For example, participants had difficulty obtaining a referral to an orthopaedic surgeon from their family physician. They also noted that the hospital stay and in-hospital physiotherapy they received were shorter after the second joint replacement surgery. They identified guidance from physiotherapists as an important component of their recovery, but sometimes had difficulty arranging physiotherapy after hospital discharge following their most recent surgery.
The changes described between the first and second joint replacements provide the participants' perspective on the impact of policy changes on wait times, reduced lengths of hospital stay and physiotherapy access. The impact of these policy changes, often made in an attempt to improve access to care, had an unintended and detrimental effect on participants' perceptions and experiences of the quality of care provided.
在过去十年中,安大略省已推出多项策略,以减少等待时间和住院时长,并改善骨科及其他患者获得物理治疗的机会。本研究的目的是探讨患者在护理环境发生重大系统变革期间接受关节置换护理的体验。
对2009年在加拿大安大略省一家专业骨科中心对12名患者进行的半结构化定性访谈进行二次分析,这些患者至少相隔五年接受了两次髋关节或膝关节置换手术。对访谈记录进行编码,然后归纳为主题。
尽管原研究旨在了解参与者在第一次和第二次关节置换手术期间麻醉技术变化的体验,但参与者描述了在此期间他们接受的护理中一些不相关的差异。例如,参与者很难从家庭医生那里获得转诊至骨科医生的机会。他们还指出,第二次关节置换手术后,他们的住院时间和住院期间接受的物理治疗时间缩短了。他们认为物理治疗师的指导是康复的重要组成部分,但有时在最近一次手术后出院后安排物理治疗会遇到困难。
第一次和第二次关节置换手术之间所描述的变化,为参与者提供了关于政策变化对等待时间、缩短住院时长和获得物理治疗机会的影响的观点。这些政策变化通常旨在改善医疗服务的可及性,但却对参与者对所提供护理质量的认知和体验产生了意想不到的不利影响。