| Literature DB >> 16504130 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Personal continuity is a core value for family practice, but policy and performance targets emphasise other aspects of care, particularly waiting times for consultation. This study examined patient and general practitioner (GP) perceptions of the value of personal continuity and rapid access, and the relationship between them.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16504130 PMCID: PMC1413534 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2296-7-11
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Characteristics of practices for participants and non-participants
| No of GPs participating | No of GPs declining to take part | No of patients participating | No of patients declining to take part | |
| <2500 | 2 | 3 | 5 | 4 |
| 2500–4999 | 2 | 1 | 6 | 0 |
| 5000–7499 | 1 | 0 | 4 | 0 |
| 7500–9999 | 8 | 1 | 14 | 7 |
| ≥10 000 | 3 | 2 | 3 | 0 |
| < -1.72 | 5 | 1 | 9 | 0 |
| -1.72 to -0.35 | 3 | 0 | 5 | 1 |
| -0.34 to 0.61 | 4 | 3 | 9 | 3 |
| >0.61 | 4 | 3 | 9 | 5 |
| Training | 8 | 3 | 12 | 7 |
| Non training | 8 | 4 | 20 | 4 |
* Carstairs score (quartiles within Lothian), Negative scores are more affluent, positive scores more deprived
Individual characteristics of general practitioner participants and non-participants
| No of GPs participating (n = 16) | No of GPs declining to take part (n = 7) | |
| 10 | Not known | |
| 20–44 | 5 | |
| 45–64 | 1 | |
| 65 and over | ||
| Female | 7 | Not known |
| Male | 9 | |
| Full time | 13 | Not known |
| Part time | 3 |
Individual characteristics of patient participants and non-participants
| No of patients participating (n = 32) | No of patients declining to take part (n = 11) | |
| 9 | Not known | |
| 20–44 | 11 | |
| 45–64 | 12 | |
| 65 and over | ||
| Female | 17 | 5 |
| Male | 15 | 6 |
| Currently preferred to see the interviewed GP | 16 | Not known |
| Currently preferred to see another GP | 5 | |
| Didn't have a preferred GP at time of study | 7 | |
| 0 | 1 | Not known |
| 1–4 | 12 | |
| 5–9 | 12 | |
| 10 or more | 3 |
+ Only for patients in main phase of study
Patients' discussion of access and personal continuity intertwined, with 28 of 32 patients balancing each against the other depending on the problem to be dealt with
| 'I have always been impressed by that particular GP, Dr Comrie. He listens without wasting a lot of time. And the impression I get is that he doesn't treat me as another number, he will talk the position over. ... I normally see him. Always. |
| 'I'm quite happy to see any doctor ... if it's a general thing that I thought, 'I'm not feeling that great, I've got the cold or something'. If it was something that was worrying me or I wasn't sure about, I would possibly go back to the doctor that I seen during my pregnancy ... because I felt I really trusted him.' |
| 'It's necessary to have a good personal relationship and I think that's quite an important feature, to me anyway, might not be to everybody, but it's something I look for. … There's a deeper level that you feel there is an understanding between you, at a subliminal almost level, it's not just conversation, it's not just professional etiquette, it's like, the guy relates to me, I understand what he's talking about, I believe he understands what I'm saying, and we get on. … [but] If I have to be seen quickly, I'll put that to one side obviously. You can't just say "Well I demand to see Dr X", I mean, we're thinking about the Dr Findlay days when the Doctor would grab his black bag and rush out to Mrs So-and-so, because she was having a fit of the vapours or something, oh no, no, forget that. No, you would put that to one side and say if it's something serious, 'What I need is a qualified medical practitioner to have a look at this right now, I don't care who it is.' |
| 'I normally work and I find that trying to get an appointment can be real pain in the neck unless there is an open clinic, which is why it would be far better for me, if I could go along in an evening, and that's not something that's available ... |
Why does personal continuity matter from the patient's perspective?
| 'Well, there's a link comes and you've a got a confidence because they have cared about you and sorted things out. You get a confidence ... I was very sick with my third child with kidney problems. He used to say to me, 'Now don't worry, I'll be there' ... It was just that took me through the months, you know, knowing that he'd be there and looking after me sort of thing.' |
| 'She knows the kind of person I am, she knows that I don't moan about my health to her because I only go when it's something really that I can't deal with myself. ... If it's my own doctor, as I keep calling her, I immediately get into conversation with her, because well, I like her and that's that. But if it's a doctor I don't know or I've only seen maybe once before, I sit down at his desk and just wait for him to speak to me.' |
| 'When I go to [my doctor] he knows my case, he knows exactly what's what, where [other doctors] have to more or less look up everything. ... I think when you're seeing different doctors, I honestly feel they're only there to help you out as far as they can that day, because you're only seeing them that day.' |
Why does personal continuity matter from the general practitioner's perspective?
| 'I think it's more important when people have say, a malignant condition or, a serious illness, a chronic illness.' |
| 'I think it's most important for patients with ongoing illnesses for regular follow-up to be seen by the same person. The advantage of patients with ongoing illnesses seeing the same doctor is that hopefully you are already familiar with their pattern of illness, how it affects them, how they normally react to it, what a given symptom might mean to them.' |
| "I think most people staying with the same doctor, I think it helps. If you have a bit of background knowledge to people it will help you solve ... the problem a little bit quicker." |
| 'Continuity of care is knowing the case and I think that's, it's particularly important in general practice because a lot of these things are not just to do with medical facts. But sometimes that's important that a patient will only see me, because when they see somebody else ... if things have gone off a bit you know, twenty five different drugs, where the hell do you start if you're seeing somebody else's patient like that, whereas your own, you probably can. So there's those sort of complicated patients, complicated in a technical medical sense. But also a lot of general practice is people explaining who they are, what they are, and what they're looking for out of the consultation. Particularly if they're kind of, either eccentric people or awkward people or whatever, then coming to a doctor who understands that is important.' |
| 'And ultimately, I mean the job gets better because the longer you're in a practice, the sense of familiarity with it all and continuity, you know, it's nice seeing patients and their families coming in. ... It makes it more interesting when you can see the same problem happening, or you know where they've come from, you know how well they've done in life.' |
Access discussed in response to specific questions, and not presented as central to GPs' work
| 'We have an ongoing problem with reception staff, because they see themselves very much as the patient's advocate and if a patient wishes an appointment on a Tuesday afternoon and I'm not available, they will feel that they're doing the right thing by the patient, by giving them an appointment with somebody else, so we have an ongoing problem in trying to get the receptionist to realise just how important it is to ask which doctor rather than what time.' |
| 'I think appointment surgeries are an incredibly efficient way of seeing patients, and I also think that it's important that the patient can get seen on any day that they wish to. ... The disadvantage of an open surgery is that you get to see a whole crowd that probably would have got better anyway, the advantage is that patients really like it.' |
| 'If they want to see one of the very heavily booked doctors they could wait two weeks to be seen. If they want to see, on average, it's maybe two days to see a doctor. The other factor to take into account is the time the patient wants to be seen. I actually did that when I was a student. I spent a week working out how long people had to wait for an appointment and the reasons why they had to wait and the single most important factor was the time didn't suit. The doctor might have lots of appointments, didn't suit, therefore (shrugs).' |
Did patients and GPs know what each other thought about personal continuity and access?
| 'As far as dealing with her on health problems in the past, I couldn't claim to know her history very well. She is the sort of person that if she came in I would have to have a good look through her records to have some understanding of what's been happening with her. ... |