| Literature DB >> 28801437 |
Juliet A Usher-Smith1, Emma Harte2, Calum MacLure2, Adam Martin3, Catherine L Saunders1, Catherine Meads4, Fiona M Walter1, Simon J Griffin1,5, Jonathan Mant1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To review the experiences of patients attending NHS Health Checks in England.Entities:
Keywords: NHS Health Check; patient experience; qualitative synthesis; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28801437 PMCID: PMC5724113 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-017169
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram. CINAHL, Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature; HMIC, Health Management Information Consortium; NHS, National Health Service; PRISMA, Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses.
Features of studies reporting results of participant surveys
| Study/year | Type of article | Setting | n | Recruitment | Response rate (%) | Overall quality |
| Baker | Journal article | 83 general practices | 1011 | Survey sent to all patients who had completed an NHS Health Check within a 2 month period | 43 | High |
| Corlett | Journal article | Pharmacy-based NHS Health Checks | 66 | Survey sent to all those who had attended an NHS Health Check within a 4 week period | 35 | High |
| Cowper | Case study | NHS Health Checks in County Durham | 483 | No details provided | Not given | Low |
| Krska | Journal article | 16 general practices in North West England | 434 | All patients with estimated 10 year CVD risk>20% from the 16 practices were sent a postal survey regardless of whether they had attended an NHS Health Check or not | 23.4 | High |
| LGA—East Riding | Case study | Outreach NHS Health Check clinics at leisure centres, community centres and workplace settings | Not given | No details provided | Not given | Low |
| NHS Greenwich | Evaluation report | Outreach clinics | 540 | Questionnaire distributed at community NHS Health Check venues | Not given | Medium |
| NHS Greenwich | Evaluation report | Outreach clinics | 72 | Questionnaire distributed at community NHS Health Check venues | Not given | Medium |
| ‘A picture of Health’ | Case study | General practice-based pilot of point-of-care NHS Health Checks in Tyne and Wear | 281 | No details provided | Not given | Low |
| Taylor | Journal article | Pharmacy-based NHS Health Checks | 97 | Pharmacists gave invitation packs to all those who attended an NHS Health Check during the first 6 months | 37.4 | High |
| Trivedy | Journal article | Outreach NHS Health Check clinics at cricket grounds | 513 | Participants were asked to complete an anonymous questionnaire immediately after their NHS Health Check | Not given | Medium |
CVD, cardiovascular disease; LGA, Local Government Association; NHS, National Health Service.
Findings from studies reporting results of participant surveys
| Domain | Result |
| Overall experience/satisfaction | 91.7% rated the overall experience highly |
| Recommend to others | 99.6% would recommend to others |
| Benefit | 99% felt they had benefited |
| Time/opportunity to ask questions | 88.0% agreed they had the time to ask questions |
| Understanding and recall of CVD risk | 97% understood everything |
| Location and timing of appointments | 69.5% rated the location of doctor’s surgery highly |
| Staff | 93.8% rated confidence in staff knowledge |
CVD, cardiovascular disease; NHS, National Health Service.
Features of qualitative studies describing patient experiences of NHS Health Checks
| Author, year | Type of report | Location of study | Setting of NHS Health Check | Data collection method | Setting for data collection |
| Method of recruitment to study | Participant characteristics | Method of analysis | Overall quality |
| Alford | Evaluation report | Knowsley | Community | Interviews and focus groups | Not given | 36 | No details given | 19 females, 17 males | Thematic analysis | Medium |
| Baker | Journal article | Gloucester | 83 general practices | Content analysis of cross-sectional survey | NA | 1011 (43%) | Survey sent to all patients who had completed an NHS Health Check within a 2 month period | 55.2% female | Thematic analysis | High |
| Chipchase | Report | East and North Birmingham | 2 general practices | Face-to-face semi-structured interviews | GP surgery | 10 | Attendees to NHS Health Checks in the first 2 weeks of February 2011 received a recruitment letter | 8 females, 2 males | Interpretative phenomeno-logical analysis | High |
| Corlett | Journal article | London | 4 pharmacies | Telephone interviews with sample of survey respondents | On the telephone | 19 | Invitation for a semi-structured telephone interview included with survey sent to all those who had attended an NHS Health Check within a 4 week period | Not given | Thematic analysis using framework approach | Medium |
| NHS Greenwich | Report | Greenwich | Community | Open-ended questionnaire, focus groups and in-depth phone interviews | Not given | 612 survey responses | Recruited from community outreach services providing NHS Health Checks | Ethnic minority participants: 42% female | Based on Health Belief Model | Medium |
| Ismail and Atkin | Journal article | Not specified | General practices | Semistructured interviews | Participants’ homes or NHS premises | 45 baseline | Purposive sampling from a list provided by five participating general practices | 21 females, 24 males | Framework analysis | High |
| Jenkinson | Journal article | Torbay | 4 general practices | Telephone or face-to-face interviews | On the telephone or participants’ homes | 17 | Letters of invitation sent to a random sample identified by general practices from lists stratified by age and gender of those who had not responded to an invitation to an NHS health check within 4 weeks. | 12 females, 5 males | Thematic analysis | High |
| Krska | Journal article | Sefton, an area of North West England | 16 general practices | Postal survey with free text responses | NA | 434 (23.4%) | All patients with estimated 10 year CVD risk>20% from the 16 practices were sent a postal survey regardless of whether they had attended an NHS Health Check or not | 19% female | Categorisation of responses | Medium |
| McNaughton | Journal article | North East England (non-specific location) | 5 general practices | Semistructured interviews | Not given | 29 | Invitations to patients from five general practices who had received an NHS Health Check and had an estimated 10 year CVD risk>20% | 10 females, 19 males | Thematic analysis | High |
| Oswald | Evaluation report | Teesside | General practices or pharmacies | Telephone semistructured interviews | On the telephone | 8 | Invited by general practices or pharmacies or from a list of patients who had attended an NHS Health Check and agreed to take part in the service evaluation | 6 had attended general practices and two pharmacies | Thematic analysis | Medium |
| Perry | Journal article | Knowsley | Community | Interviews and focus groups | Not given | 36 | Letter or telephone invitation to all 38 people who were at high risk of CVD and had attended an NHS Health Check in the past 12–18 months were invited. The remaining attendees at low risk of CVD were purposively sampled for gender, age, risk score. | 3 focus groups: 1 for high risk scores (6 males), 2 for low risk scores (17 females and 7 males) | Thematic analysis | High |
| Riley | Journal article | Bristol inner city | Community | Semistructured interviews | Community venues or participants’ homes | 16 | Participants were recruited via their attendance of community outreach events. | 7 females, 9 males | Thematic analysis | High |
| Riley | Journal article | Bristol | General practices | Face-to-face and telephone semi-structured interviews | On the telephone or in participants’ homes | 28 | Purposive sampling from those identified through a search of patient records for patients who had undertaken an NHS Health Check within the previous 6 months | 16 females, 12 males | Thematic analysis | High |
| Shaw | Journal article | Birmingham and Black Country | General practices and community | Semistructured interviews | Not given | 23 | Patients who had attended an NHS Health Check were invited by practice managers or lead clinicians | High black and minority ethnic population and high levels of deprivation | Thematic analysis | High |
| Strutt | Masters thesis | Darlington, Co Durham, UK | two general practices | Semistructured face-to-face interviews | Participants’ homes | 16 | Invitation letters or telephone | 7 females, 9 males | Thematic analysis | High |
CVD, cardiovascular disease; GP, general practitioner; NA, not applicable; NHS, National Health Service.
Studies contributing to each of the qualitative themes
| Unmet expectations | Limited understanding of the risk score | Preference for better information | Potential trigger for behaviour change | Confusion around follow-up | |
| Alford | ● | ● | ● | ||
| Baker | ● | ● | ● | ● | |
| Chipchase | ● | ● | ● | ● | |
| Corlett | ● | ● | ● | ||
| NHS Greenwich | ● | ● | ● | ||
| Ismail and Atkin | ● | ● | ● | ● | |
| Jenkinson | ● | ||||
| Krska | ● | ● | |||
| McNaughton | ● | ● | |||
| Oswald | ● | ● | |||
| Perry | ● | ● | ● | ||
| Riley | ● | ● | ● | ||
| Riley | ● | ||||
| Shaw | ● | ● | ● | ● | |
| Strutt | ● | ● | ● | ● |
NHS, National Health Service.