Barker Carol, Crengle Sue, Bramley Dale, Bartholomew Karen, Bolton Patricia, Walsh Michael, Wignall Jean
Department of Planning, Funding and Outcomes, Auckland and Waitemata District Health Boards, Auckland.
Invercargill Medical Centre, Invercargill.
N Z Med J. 2016 Oct 28;129(1444):15-34.
Ambulatory Sensitive Hospitalisations (ASH) are a group of conditions potentially preventable through interventions delivered in the primary health care setting. ASH rates are consistently higher for Māori compared with non-Māori. This study aimed to establish Māori experience of factors driving the use of hospital services for ASH conditions, including barriers to accessing primary care.
A telephone questionnaire exploring pathways to ASH was administered to Māori (n=150) admitted to Auckland and Waitemata District Health Board (DHB) hospitals with an ASH condition between January 1st-June 30th 2015.
A cohort of 1,013 participants were identified; 842 (83.1%) were unable to be contacted. Of the 171 people contactable, 150 agreed to participate, giving an overall response rate of 14.8% and response rate of contactable patients of 87.7%. Results demonstrated high rates of self-reported enrolment, utilisation and preference for primary care. Many participants demonstrated appropriate health seeking behaviour and accurate recall of diagnoses. While financial barriers to accessing primary care were reported, non-financial barriers including lack of after-hours provision (12.6% adults, 37.7% children), appointment availability (7.4% adults, 17.0% children) and lack of transport (13.7% adults, 20.8% children) also featured in participant responses.
Interventions to reduce Māori ASH include: timely access to primary care through electronic communications, increased appointment availability, extended opening hours, low cost after-hours care and consistent best management of ASH conditions in general practice through clinical pathways. Facilitated enrolment of ASH patients with no general practitioner could also reduce ASH. Research into transport barriers and enablers for Māori accessing primary care is required to support future interventions.
门诊敏感住院(ASH)是一组可通过初级卫生保健机构的干预措施预防的疾病。与非毛利人相比,毛利人的ASH发生率一直较高。本研究旨在了解毛利人在因ASH疾病使用医院服务的驱动因素方面的经历,包括获得初级保健的障碍。
对2015年1月1日至6月30日期间因ASH疾病入住奥克兰和怀塔玛塔地区卫生委员会(DHB)医院的毛利人(n = 150)进行了一项电话问卷调查,以探究ASH的就医途径。
共识别出1013名参与者;842人(83.1%)无法联系到。在171名可联系的人中,150人同意参与,总体回复率为14.8%,可联系患者的回复率为87.7%。结果显示,自我报告的初级保健登记率、利用率和偏好率较高。许多参与者表现出适当的健康寻求行为和对诊断的准确回忆。虽然报告了获得初级保健的经济障碍,但非经济障碍也在参与者的回复中有所体现,包括非工作时间服务不足(12.6%的成年人,37.7%的儿童)、预约机会(7.4%的成年人,17.0%的儿童)和交通不便(13.7%的成年人,20.8%的儿童)。
减少毛利人ASH的干预措施包括:通过电子通信及时获得初级保健、增加预约机会、延长开放时间、提供低成本的非工作时间护理以及通过临床路径在全科医疗中对ASH疾病进行持续的最佳管理。为没有全科医生的ASH患者提供便利的登记也可以减少ASH。需要对毛利人获得初级保健的交通障碍和促进因素进行研究,以支持未来的干预措施。