| Literature DB >> 31494576 |
Alison Cooper1, Michelle Edwards1, Janet Brandling2, Andrew Carson-Stevens1, Matthew Cooke3, Freya Davies1, Thomas Hughes4, Katherine Morton2, Aloysius Siriwardena5, Sarah Voss2, Jonathan Benger2, Adrian Edwards1.
Abstract
Primary care services in or alongside emergency departments look and function differently and are described using inconsistent terminology. Research to determine effectiveness of these models is hampered by outdated classification systems, limiting the opportunity for data synthesis to draw conclusions and inform decision-making and policy. We used findings from a literature review, a national survey of Type 1 emergency departments in England and Wales, staff interviews, other routine data sources and discussions from two stakeholder events to inform the taxonomy. We categorised the forms inside or outside the emergency department: inside primary care services may be integrated with emergency department patient flow or may run parallel to that activity; outside services may be offered on site or off site. We then describe a conceptual spectrum of integration: identifying constructs that influence how the services function-from being closer to an emergency medicine service or to usual primary care. This taxonomy provides a basis for future evaluation of service models that will comprise the evidence base to inform policy-making in this domain. Commissioners and service providers can consider these constructs in characterising and designing services depending on local circumstances and context. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: emergency care systems, primary care; emergency departments; primary care
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31494576 PMCID: PMC6837280 DOI: 10.1136/emermed-2018-208305
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Med J ISSN: 1472-0205 Impact factor: 2.740
UK urgent and emergency healthcare services10–12
| Emergency department | Hospital-based ‘front door’ departments for patients with accidents or emergencies. |
| Minor injuries unit | Care for minor injuries only; may be nurse led. |
| Walk-in centre | Walk-in access for unscheduled urgent care. May include minor injuries and minor illness; may be nurse led. |
| Urgent care centre | Unscheduled care for minor injuries and minor illness. Includes minor injury units and walk-in centres; may be nurse led. |
| Urgent treatment centre | GP-led urgent care centres. |
| GP in-hours | GP-led primary care services between 8:00 and 18:30 hours. |
| GP out-of-hours | GP-led services available out-of-hours (18:30-8:00 hours) and weekends, not usually receiving referrals directly from the emergency department. |
| Alongside the emergency department | GP services located alongside or next to the emergency department. |
| Screening at the emergency department front door | GPs working at the front of the department screening attendees and either treating or diverting to other places - effectively acting as a filter. |
| Fully integrated with the emergency department | GP services fully integrated into a joint operation covering the whole range of unscheduled primary care and emergency services. |
| Embedded into the emergency department | GPs working within the emergency department alongside emergency clinicians, receiving patients streamed as appropriate for primary care. |
| Co-located urgent care centre | GPs working in a separate area next to the emergency department, receiving patients who have been advised to attend through telephone assessment service (eg, ‘National Health Service 111’) or streamed via the emergency department nurse. |
GP, General Practitioner.
Figure 1The form of primary care service models in or alongside emergency departments.
Taxonomy to describe the form of primary care service models in or alongside emergency departments
| INSIDE the emergency department | Patients access a primary care service within the emergency department. |
| INSIDE: integrated | The primary care service is fully integrated with the emergency medicine service. |
| INSIDE: parallel | There is a separate primary care service within the emergency department, for patients with primary care type problems. |
| OUTSIDE the emergency department | Patients access a primary care service separate to the emergency department. |
| OUTSIDE: on site | The primary care service is elsewhere on the hospital site. |
| OUTSIDE: off site | The primary care service is off site (may include telephone advice via 111, or pharmacies, dentists, opticians, urgent care centres or registered in-hours or out-of-hours primary care services)*. |
*These services are distinct from emergency department provision so are not represented further in the taxonomy.
Figure 2Conceptual model identifying constructs that influence the function of primary care services in or alongside emergency departments
Figure 3The taxonomy applied to case site examples