Characteristics of service users and provider organisations associated with experience of out of hours general practitioner care in England: population based cross sectional postal questionnaire survey.
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Authors
Warren, Fiona C
Abel, Gary
Elliott, Marc N
Richards, Suzanne
Barry, Heather E
Campbell, John L
Publication Date
2015-04-29Journal Title
BMJ
ISSN
0959-8146
Publisher
BMJ
Volume
350
Pages
h2040
Language
eng
Type
Article
Physical Medium
Electronic
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Warren, F. C., Abel, G., Lyratzopoulos, G., Elliott, M. N., Richards, S., Barry, H. E., Roland, M., & et al. (2015). Characteristics of service users and provider organisations associated with experience of out of hours general practitioner care in England: population based cross sectional postal questionnaire survey.. BMJ, 350 h2040. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.h2040
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the experience of users of out of hours general practitioner services in England, UK. DESIGN: Population based cross sectional postal questionnaire survey. SETTING: General Practice Patient Survey 2012-13. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Potential associations between sociodemographic factors (including ethnicity and ability to take time away from work during working hours to attend a healthcare consultation) and provider organisation type (not for profit, NHS, or commercial) and service users' experience of out of hours care (timeliness, confidence and trust in the out of hours clinician, and overall experience of the service), rated on a scale of 0-100. Which sociodemographic/provider characteristics were associated with service users' experience, the extent to which any observed differences could be because of clustering of service users of a particular sociodemographic group within poorer scoring providers, and the extent to which observed differences in experience varied across types of provider. RESULTS: The overall response rate was 35%; 971,232/2,750,000 patients returned surveys. Data from 902,170 individual service users were mapped through their registered practice to one of 86 providers of out of hours GP care with known organisation type. Commercial providers of out of hours GP care were associated with poorer reports of overall experience of care, with a mean difference of -3.13 (95% confidence interval -4.96 to -1.30) compared with not for profit providers. Asian service users reported lower scores for all three experience outcomes than white service users (mean difference for overall experience of care -3.62, -4.36 to -2.89), as did service users who were unable to take time away from work compared with service users who did not work (mean difference for overall experience of care -4.73, -5.29 to -4.17). CONCLUSIONS: Commercial providers of out of hours GP care were associated with poorer experience of care. Targeted interventions aimed at improving experience for patients from ethnic minorities and patients who are unable to take time away from work might be warranted.
Keywords
Adolescent, Adult, After-Hours Care, Cross-Sectional Studies, England, Family Practice, General Practitioners, Health Care Surveys, Humans, Patient Satisfaction, Quality of Health Care, Retrospective Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult
Sponsorship
TCC (None)
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.h2040
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/279871
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)
Licence:
http://www.rioxx.net/licenses/all-rights-reserved
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