Abstract

BackgroundOptimal utilisation of the out-of-hours primary care (OOH-PC) services remains a concern in public health policy. We need more knowledge on potentially avoidable contacts. This study examines the frequency of medically assessed inappropriate OOH-PC calls from adults, explores factors associated with such assessment, and examines the relation to patient-assessed severity of health problem and fulfilment of expectations.MethodsWe performed secondary analyses of data from a large cross-sectional survey on contacts to Danish OOH-PC. As access to Danish OOH-PC is provided through telephone triage delivered by a general practitioner (GP), we included only telephone contacts. A contact was characterised as medically inappropriate when the triage GP assessed that the request from a medical perspective should have been directed to daytime primary care. Appropriateness was examined in relation to patient characteristics, reason for encounter, time of contact, and whether the contact was triaged to a face-to-face consultation, and in relation to patient-assessed severity of the health problem and fulfilment of expectations. Associations were estimated with odds ratios (ORs) using multivariate analysis.ResultsOf all contacts, 23.7% were assessed as medically inappropriate. Such assessment was associated with: younger age, longer symptom duration, exacerbation of chronic condition, and contact only few hours away from own GP’s office hours. Of medically inappropriate contacts, 31.3% were from patients aged 18–30 years, 41.5% concerned symptoms of > 24 h, 19.4% concerned exacerbation of chronic condition, and 21.3% were calls < 3 h away from own GP’s regular office hours. Medicine request was the most frequent reason for an inappropriate contact (14.3% of medically inappropriate contacts). In 53.4% of contacts assessed as inappropriate, the health problem was considered as severe by patients and medical assessed inappropriateness was significantly associated with unfulfilled patient expectations.ConclusionsOne in four OOH-PC calls was considered medically inappropriate. Future efforts to reduce suboptimal use of OOH-PC should focus on the types of contacts with the highest optimisation potential, e.g., medication requests, long-lasting symptoms, and exacerbations. Such interventions should aim at bridging the gap between the GP’s medical assessment and the patient’s expectations to appropriate OOH-PC use.

Highlights

  • Optimal utilisation of the out-of-hours primary care (OOH-PC) services remains a concern in public health policy

  • We focus on contacts that according to a medical assessment made by the triage general practitioner (GP) should have been directed to primary care within the regular office hours

  • The aims of this study were (1) to describe the frequency and the characteristics of “medically inappropriate” OOH-PC calls performed by adult patients, (2) to identify factors associated with contacts assessed by GPs as medically inappropriate, and (3) to examine the patientassessed problem severity and the fulfilment of expectations in relation to the GP-assessed medical inappropriateness of the contact

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Summary

Introduction

Optimal utilisation of the out-of-hours primary care (OOH-PC) services remains a concern in public health policy. Patient contacts to out-of-hours primary care (OOH-PC) are sometimes perceived as medically inappropriate by health care professionals [1,2,3]. A few contacts should have been directed to an emergency department (ED), some are considered manageable by self-care, and others should have been presented within the regular office hours in primary care [4, 5]. As the demands for OOH-PC are high, a major health policy concern is to reduce the suboptimal use of these services [6]. We focus on contacts that according to a medical assessment made by the triage GP should have been directed to primary care within the regular office hours

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