| Literature DB >> 34856970 |
Madlen Hoerold1, Marc Gottschalk2, Carla Maria Debbeler3, Heike Heytens3, Saskia Ehrentreich3, Ruediger C Braun-Dullaeus2, Christian Apfelbacher3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Measures to manage the COVID-19 pandemic have led to impacts on healthcare systems and providers worldwide. Outpatient healthcare professionals (HCPs) provide the majority of patient care. Insight into their experiences during a pandemic is rare. Therefore, we explored how primary and secondary care HCPs in a rural area in Germany experienced their work during the pandemic and what health-related outcomes they perceived in their patients. In this context, we also examined the impact on access to and utilization of healthcare and working conditions.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiologists; Content analysis; Family physicians; Germany; Healthcare
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34856970 PMCID: PMC8638652 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-021-07261-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Deductive coding guideline
| Category definition | Anchor Examples | Coding Rules |
|---|---|---|
Pertains to the perceived impact of the Covid-19-pandemic on access to and utilization of primary and secondary care in rural areas. | "We also had many patients who did not come to the medical office during this time." (Martina Stünznagel, family physician) | Clear assignment; Multiple responses allowed |
Pertains to the perceived impact of the Covid-19-pandemic on working condition of HCPs in primary and secondary care in rural areas. | "I did not work less, rather more; I had the feeling, and then tried to care for the patients in a way that was appropriate under the circumstances." (Georg Hassel, cardiologist) | Clear assignment; Multiple responses allowed |
Pertains to the perceived impact of the Covid-19-pandemic on health-related outcome in patients in rural areas. | "[…] that has reduced the medical care, the closeness of the medical care and thus with sufficient probability also, I say, the prognosis worsened, that will already be so." (Franz Schulze, cardiologist) | Clear assignment; Multiple responses allowed |
Characteristics of the study sample
| Family physician | Cardiologist | Non-physician assistant | Entire Sample | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | 15 (5 female) | 7 (1 female) | 6 (6 female) | 28 (12 female) |
| Female (in %) | 33% | 14.3% | 100% | 42.9% |
| Age (MD ± SD) | 52.8 ± 10.37 | 50.3 ± 6.5 | 39.2 ± 5.67 | 49.3 ± 10.19 |
| Region (inhabitants per square kilometer) | ||||
| < 100 inhabitants per square kilometer | 11 | 1 | 3 | 15 |
| 100–500 inhabitants per square kilometer | 4 | 4 | 3 | 11 |
| > 500 inhabitants per square kilometer | 0 | 2 | 0 | 2 |
Interview duration (MD in min. ± SD) | 18:53 ± 05:16 | 25:05 ± 13:08 | 24:12 ± 07:31 | 21:40 ± 08:57 |
Years of outpatient experience (MIN-MAX; MD ± SD) | 1–47 19.42 ± 13.19 | 1–21 6.71 ± 7.23 | 2–28 8.8 ± 7.05 | 1–47 13.96 ± 12.15 |
Access to and utilization of health care - sub-categories, brief definition and anchor example
| Sub-category | Sub-categroy definition | Anchor example |
|---|---|---|
| Fewer consultations | Pertains to the reduction of medical consultations. | “In the second quarter, fewer number of cases and significantly fewer patient contacts.” (Hartmut Gendermann, family physician) |
| Cancellations | Pertains to cancellations of appointments, examinations, and surgeries, both by patients and healthcare professionals. | “[...] when the topic was quite topical. March, April, into May, many appointments, check-ups were canceled. Even, surgeries canceled, diagnostic procedures canceled." (Christoph Zobel, family physician) |
| Availability | Pertains to the experiences of always being available for patients. | “Due to the fact that the physicians’ offices, I must speak for all colleagues here, were always available during the entire Corona period and also for the [...] care of the patients, even though many tried to solve the question at the window and through the window and otherwise a lot with protective measures, all patients nevertheless got their medication and also the most important examinations that were necessary.” (Volker Heinze, family physician) |
| Normality returned | Pertains to the experiences that normality has returned regarding access and utilization of healthcare. | “That is currently no longer the case here. That means we have the same number of patients. No cancellations-. As they are scheduled, they come.” (Michael Haase, cardiologist) |
Working condition - sub-categories, brief definition and anchor example
| Sub-category | Sub-categroy definition | Anchor example |
|---|---|---|
| Practice organisation | Pertains to preparation and changes in practice organisation. | “We have tried to organise the workflows a bit, to structure them so that patients have fewer waiting times. That means we did not order quite as closely.” (Michael Haase, cardiologist) |
| Personal protective equipment (PPE) | Pertains to experiences in the procurement and work with PPE. | “Yes, well, we have all the hygiene standards, that we can have, we have done. It starts with disinfectants, it starts with the fact that the nurses in the registration area work with face masks, that we have placed a spitting protection, that we only allow a very small number of patients into the practice. I also work here permanently with a face mask.” (Steffen Hagel, family physician) |
| Alternative ways of healhcare provision | Pertains to changes in the provision of health care. | "Of course, it was also challenging, I talked to the patients on the phone a lot during that time. [...], I did telephone consultations." (Georg Hassel, cardiologist) |
| Social tension | Pertains to the importance of social relationships to patients and colleagues. | “At the very beginning, I spoke against it. I have stopped doing that in the meantime, because the people who are speakers have an entrenched opinion and they do not listen to you. That often ends up in discussions that steal my time and simply - the patients become aggressive. So then, I always try to say that everyone is allowed to have his opinion. [...] Especially when they tell me there is no Corona and we have never seen a positive one, I prove it by saying “I do”.” (Claudia Müller, non-physician assistant) |
| Management of pandemic information | Pertains to the challenges of managing the large amount of pandemic-related information. | “I am informed. (laughs) You are so bombarded with news and scare stories, so you do not have to make any special effort. Instead, it just comes flooding in, yes.” (Steffen Hagel, family physician) |
| Burden | Pertains to the importance of emotional and physical distress in everyday work. | “I think that is exhausting. For the patients, of course, but it is also exhausting for me, yes. So again and again you have to say: “Please remember, there are not allowed to be so many patients in the waiting room”. When I open the door to bring in the next one, there are 10 in the small waiting room. Then I repeat that. I always have to repeat, repeat, repeat everything, then the patients feel patronized [...] And sometimes - on Friday - you often get tired of it. […] That is why I still do - I still love our work. And I love the life in the practice. And I like the patients for the most part. Yes, so it is a special situation for everyone.” (Claudia Müller, non-physician assistant) |
Health-related outcomes - sub-categories, brief definition and anchor example
| Sub-category | Sub-categroy definition | Anchor example |
|---|---|---|
| Deficits in monitoring | Pertains to deficits in routine monitoring. | “[…] we have of course a deficit in the control, the routine monitoring of the patients like blood pressure, cholesterol controls, since now many patients [...] did not come to the blood test or did not come to the ECG, [...] Accordingly patients have withdrawn themselves from the routine monitoring and we have there certainly also catch-up need.” (Volker Heinze, family physician) |
| Health disadvantages | Pertains to the discourse on health disadvantages. | "We have had some things where we would have liked to respond sooner. Where the patients just did not come." (Martina Stünznagel, family physician) |
| Psychological impacts | Pertains to psychological consequences. | “Yes, psychological, of course. So psychological effects - depression in any case, yes. [...], where people are branded as potential virus carriers, yes. Whom do I infect- do I infect my grandmother or I now my grandchildren for example. [...] It is quite clear that this has psychological consequences. So I’m assuming - we’ll see - that the suicide rate will also rise in the coming months, i.e. winter depression plus Covid, in any case.” (Helmut Hosang, cardiologist) |