Ferguson Jane, Stringer Gemma, Walshe Kieran, Donnelly Ailsa, Grigoroglou Christos, Allen Thomas, Kontopantelis Evangelos, Ashcroft Darren M
Health Services Management Centre, The University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK.
Alliance Manchester Business School, The University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
Health Expect. 2024 Aug;27(4):e14156. doi: 10.1111/hex.14156.
There have been some concerns about the impact of temporary doctors, otherwise known as locums, on patient safety and the quality of care. Despite these concerns, research has paid little attention to the implications of locum working on patient experience.
A qualitative semi-structured interview study was conducted with 130 participants including locums, people working with locums and patients with experience of being seen or treated by locums. Analysis was conducted using a reflexive thematic approach and abductive analysis to position themes against wider knowledge.
Three main themes were constructed through analysis: (1) Awareness and disclosure; patients were not always aware if their doctor was a locum, and there was some debate about whether patients had a right to know, particularly if locum working presented quality and safety risks. (2) Continuity and accessibility of care; access was regarded as priority for acute conditions, but for long-term or serious conditions, patients preferred to see a permanent doctor who knew their history, although it was acknowledged that locums could provide fresh perspectives. (3) Communication and practice; locums and patients described how consultations were approached differently when doctors worked as locums. Patients evaluated their interactions based on how safe they felt with practitioners.
Patients reported that they were unlikely to have continuity of care with any doctors delivering care, regardless of their contractual status. Locums sometimes provided new perspectives on care which could be beneficial for patient outcomes, but for patients with long-term, complex or serious conditions continuity of care was important, and these patients may avoid or delay seeking care when locums are the only available option.
Patients and carers were involved in our study from inception to dissemination. Our Patient and Public Involvement (PPI) forum was involved throughout project design and planning and gave us feedback and guidance on research materials and outputs (e.g., study protocol, participant information sheets, survey tools, interview schedules, emerging findings). Our PPI forum co-produced our patient interview schedule, two members of our PPI forum led the patient focus groups and all were involved in analysis of patient interviews. Our PPI Chair was involved in the preparation of this manuscript.
临时医生,也就是所谓的临时代理医生,其对患者安全和医疗质量的影响引发了一些担忧。尽管存在这些担忧,但研究很少关注临时代理医生工作对患者体验的影响。
对130名参与者进行了定性半结构化访谈研究,参与者包括临时代理医生、与临时代理医生共事的人员以及有临时代理医生诊疗经历的患者。采用反思性主题方法和溯因分析进行分析,以便将主题与更广泛的知识联系起来。
通过分析构建了三个主要主题:(1)认知与告知;患者并不总是知道他们的医生是否是临时代理医生,对于患者是否有权知晓存在一些争议,特别是当临时代理医生工作带来质量和安全风险时。(2)医疗服务的连续性与可及性;对于急性病症,可及性被视为优先事项,但对于长期或严重病症,患者更倾向于看了解其病史的固定医生,尽管人们承认临时代理医生可以提供新的视角。(3)沟通与实践;临时代理医生和患者描述了医生担任临时代理医生时会诊方式的不同。患者根据与从业者相处时的安全感来评估他们的互动。
患者报告称,无论医生的合同状态如何,他们不太可能与任何提供医疗服务的医生保持连续的医疗服务。临时代理医生有时会为医疗服务提供新的视角,这可能对患者的治疗结果有益,但对于患有长期、复杂或严重病症的患者来说,医疗服务的连续性很重要,当临时代理医生是唯一可用选择时,这些患者可能会避免或推迟寻求治疗。
患者和护理人员从研究开始到传播都参与其中。我们的患者和公众参与(PPI)论坛在整个项目设计和规划过程中都参与其中,并就研究材料和成果(如研究方案、参与者信息表、调查工具、访谈时间表、新出现的发现)给我们反馈和指导。我们的PPI论坛共同制定了患者访谈时间表,我们的PPI论坛的两名成员主持了患者焦点小组,所有人都参与了患者访谈的分析。我们的PPI主席参与了本手稿的编写。