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Which patients miss appointments with general practice and why: a systematic review

Which patients miss appointments with general practice and why: a systematic review
Which patients miss appointments with general practice and why: a systematic review
Background: missed GP appointments have considerable time and cost implications for healthcare services.

Aim: this systematic review aims to explore the rate of missed primary care appointments, what the reported reasons are for appointments being missed, and which patients are more likely to miss appointments.

Design and setting: this study reports the findings of a systematic review. The included studies report the rate or reasons of missed appointments in a primary care setting.

Method: databases were searched using a pre-defined search strategy. Eligible studies were selected for inclusion based on detailed inclusion criteria through title, abstract, and full text screening. Quality was assessed on all included studies, and findings were synthesised to answer the research questions.

Results: a total of 26 studies met the inclusion criteria for the review. Of these, 19 reported a rate of missed appointments. The mean rate of missed appointments was 15.2%, with a median of 12.9%. Twelve studies reported a reason that appointments were missed, with work or family/childcare commitments, forgetting the appointment, and transportation difficulties most commonly reported. In all, 20 studies reported characteristics of people likely to miss appointments. Patients who were likely to miss appointments were those from minority ethnicity, low sociodemographic status, and younger patients (
Conclusion: findings from this review have potential implications for targeted interventions to address missed appointments in primary care. This is the first step for clinicians to be able to target interventions to reduce the rate of missed appointments.
0960-1643
e406-e412
Parsons, Joanne
a0ecd433-2fc5-45c1-ab3c-58c1cb28f281
Bryce, Carol
9df60565-94a0-4a12-bb77-20c73c2eaf4c
Atherton, Helen
9bb8932e-7bb7-4781-ab97-114613de99b1
Parsons, Joanne
a0ecd433-2fc5-45c1-ab3c-58c1cb28f281
Bryce, Carol
9df60565-94a0-4a12-bb77-20c73c2eaf4c
Atherton, Helen
9bb8932e-7bb7-4781-ab97-114613de99b1

Parsons, Joanne, Bryce, Carol and Atherton, Helen (2021) Which patients miss appointments with general practice and why: a systematic review. British Journal of General Practice, 71 (707), e406-e412. (doi:10.3399/BJGP.2020.1017).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: missed GP appointments have considerable time and cost implications for healthcare services.

Aim: this systematic review aims to explore the rate of missed primary care appointments, what the reported reasons are for appointments being missed, and which patients are more likely to miss appointments.

Design and setting: this study reports the findings of a systematic review. The included studies report the rate or reasons of missed appointments in a primary care setting.

Method: databases were searched using a pre-defined search strategy. Eligible studies were selected for inclusion based on detailed inclusion criteria through title, abstract, and full text screening. Quality was assessed on all included studies, and findings were synthesised to answer the research questions.

Results: a total of 26 studies met the inclusion criteria for the review. Of these, 19 reported a rate of missed appointments. The mean rate of missed appointments was 15.2%, with a median of 12.9%. Twelve studies reported a reason that appointments were missed, with work or family/childcare commitments, forgetting the appointment, and transportation difficulties most commonly reported. In all, 20 studies reported characteristics of people likely to miss appointments. Patients who were likely to miss appointments were those from minority ethnicity, low sociodemographic status, and younger patients (
Conclusion: findings from this review have potential implications for targeted interventions to address missed appointments in primary care. This is the first step for clinicians to be able to target interventions to reduce the rate of missed appointments.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 3 February 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 27 May 2021
Published date: June 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 487308
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487308
ISSN: 0960-1643
PURE UUID: bc41930f-a445-4454-aeb5-5de90d8829c5
ORCID for Helen Atherton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7072-1925

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Date deposited: 16 Feb 2024 17:26
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:18

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Contributors

Author: Joanne Parsons
Author: Carol Bryce
Author: Helen Atherton ORCID iD

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