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Management of out-of-hours calls by a general practice cooperative: a geographical analysis of telephone access and consultation

Management of out-of-hours calls by a general practice cooperative: a geographical analysis of telephone access and consultation
Management of out-of-hours calls by a general practice cooperative: a geographical analysis of telephone access and consultation
Background. Centralization of urgent care services may reduce access for patients living further away from primary care centres (PCCs). Telephone-based access is often proposed to remedy this.

Objective. To examine the effect of distance and rurality on the doctor’s decision to manage the call by telephone or face-to-face.

Methods. Geographical analysis of routine data on calls to an out-of-hours cooperative, including logistic regression to examine the effects of distance and rurality on triage decisions.

Results. For distances >6 km, the likelihood of receiving telephone advice only increased progressively with increasing distance from the PCC (Model 1). However, for those patients seen face-to-face, overall, there was increased likelihood of receiving a home visit (compared with PCC attendance) with increasing distance (Model 2).
Conclusions. Patients experience differences in how their call to out-of-hours services is managed depending on where they live. Telephone access and consultation can be used to overcome geographical barriers but do not necessarily make access geographically equitable. Those who live furthest away are more likely to receive telephone advice rather than being seen face-to-face, but paradoxically, those who do get a home visit are more likely to live at a greater distance from the PCC. These findings present important challenges to proposals to integrate urgent care services and increase telephone-based provision and suggest that attention should be given to configuring services to ensure geographical equity of access, regardless of how far away people live from health services.
consultation, family medicine, health service management, telemedicine
0263-2136
677-682
Turnbull, Joanne
cd1f8462-d698-4a90-af82-46c39536694b
Pope, Catherine
21ae1290-0838-4245-adcf-6f901a0d4607
Martin, David
e5c52473-e9f0-4f09-b64c-fa32194b162f
Lattimer, Valerie
5aa2c9a5-13cb-4776-9b0d-c618e6913f5b
Turnbull, Joanne
cd1f8462-d698-4a90-af82-46c39536694b
Pope, Catherine
21ae1290-0838-4245-adcf-6f901a0d4607
Martin, David
e5c52473-e9f0-4f09-b64c-fa32194b162f
Lattimer, Valerie
5aa2c9a5-13cb-4776-9b0d-c618e6913f5b

Turnbull, Joanne, Pope, Catherine, Martin, David and Lattimer, Valerie (2011) Management of out-of-hours calls by a general practice cooperative: a geographical analysis of telephone access and consultation. Family Practice, 28 (6), 677-682. (doi:10.1093/fampra/cmr029). (PMID:21596692)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background. Centralization of urgent care services may reduce access for patients living further away from primary care centres (PCCs). Telephone-based access is often proposed to remedy this.

Objective. To examine the effect of distance and rurality on the doctor’s decision to manage the call by telephone or face-to-face.

Methods. Geographical analysis of routine data on calls to an out-of-hours cooperative, including logistic regression to examine the effects of distance and rurality on triage decisions.

Results. For distances >6 km, the likelihood of receiving telephone advice only increased progressively with increasing distance from the PCC (Model 1). However, for those patients seen face-to-face, overall, there was increased likelihood of receiving a home visit (compared with PCC attendance) with increasing distance (Model 2).
Conclusions. Patients experience differences in how their call to out-of-hours services is managed depending on where they live. Telephone access and consultation can be used to overcome geographical barriers but do not necessarily make access geographically equitable. Those who live furthest away are more likely to receive telephone advice rather than being seen face-to-face, but paradoxically, those who do get a home visit are more likely to live at a greater distance from the PCC. These findings present important challenges to proposals to integrate urgent care services and increase telephone-based provision and suggest that attention should be given to configuring services to ensure geographical equity of access, regardless of how far away people live from health services.

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More information

Published date: 18 May 2011
Keywords: consultation, family medicine, health service management, telemedicine

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 188235
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/188235
ISSN: 0263-2136
PURE UUID: 7d367a5a-682d-428e-b8b1-a2f7a5105ba0
ORCID for Joanne Turnbull: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5006-4438
ORCID for Catherine Pope: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8935-6702
ORCID for David Martin: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0397-0769

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Date deposited: 02 Jun 2011 12:26
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:53

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Contributors

Author: Joanne Turnbull ORCID iD
Author: Catherine Pope ORCID iD
Author: David Martin ORCID iD
Author: Valerie Lattimer

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