Health Services Research Centre, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand.
Department of Primary Health Care and General Practice, University of Otago, Wellington, New Zealand.
Int J Health Policy Manag. 2022 Aug 1;11(8):1316-1324. doi: 10.34172/ijhpm.2021.26. Epub 2021 Apr 13.
In Aotearoa/New Zealand, the first nation-wide coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) lockdown occurred from March 23, 2020 to May 13, 2020, requiring most people to stay at home. Health services had to suddenly change how they delivered healthcare and some services were limited or postponed. This study investigated access to healthcare during this lockdown period, whether patients delayed seeking healthcare and reasons for these delays, focusing on the accessibility of primary care services.
Adults (aged 18 years or older) who had contact with primary care services were invited through social media and email lists to participate in an online survey (n = 1010) and 38 people were recruited for in-depth interviews. We thematically analysed qualitative data from the survey and interviews, reported alongside relevant descriptive survey results.
More than half (55%) of survey respondents delayed seeking healthcare during lockdown. Factors at a national or health system-level that could influence delay were changing public service messages, an excessive focus on COVID-19 and urgent issues, and poor service integration. Influential factors at a primary care-level were communication and outreach, use of technology, gatekeeping, staff manner and the safety of the clinical practice environment. Factors that influenced patients' individual decisions to seek healthcare were the ability to self-manage and self-triage, consciousness of perceived pressure on health services and fear of infection.
In future pandemic lockdowns or crises, appropriate access to primary care services can be improved by unambiguous national messages and better integration of services. Primary care practices should adopt rapid proactive outreach to patients, fostering a calm but safe clinical practice environment. More support for patients to self-manage and self-triage appropriately could benefit over-burdened health systems during lockdowns and as part of business as usual in less extraordinary times.
在新西兰,2020 年 3 月 23 日至 5 月 13 日,全国范围内首次出现了 2019 年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)封锁,要求大多数人留在家中。卫生服务部门不得不突然改变提供医疗保健的方式,一些服务受到限制或推迟。本研究调查了在封锁期间获得医疗保健的情况,患者是否延迟寻求医疗保健以及导致这些延迟的原因,重点关注初级保健服务的可及性。
通过社交媒体和电子邮件列表邀请接触初级保健服务的成年人(18 岁或以上)参与在线调查(n=1010),并招募了 38 人进行深入访谈。我们对调查和访谈的定性数据进行了主题分析,并结合相关描述性调查结果进行了报告。
超过一半(55%)的调查受访者在封锁期间延迟寻求医疗保健。可能影响延迟的国家或卫生系统层面的因素包括不断变化的公共服务信息、对 COVID-19 和紧急问题的过度关注以及服务整合不佳。初级保健层面的影响因素包括沟通和外展、技术的使用、把关、员工态度和临床实践环境的安全性。影响患者个人寻求医疗保健决策的因素包括自我管理和自我分诊的能力、对卫生服务压力的意识以及对感染的恐惧。
在未来的大流行封锁或危机中,可以通过明确的国家信息和更好的服务整合来改善初级保健服务的适当获取。初级保健实践应迅速主动地与患者联系,营造平静但安全的临床实践环境。为患者提供更多支持,使其能够适当自我管理和自我分诊,这可能有利于在封锁期间和在不太特殊的时期内为负担过重的卫生系统提供帮助。