Abstract

Every day GP surgery waiting rooms are used by thousands of people, yet the experience of waiting and the nature of the waiting rooms in these surgeries has been neglected as a subject for critical attention. This article reports on a unique photographic research project conducted with GP waiting rooms as the research subject. Using the key phrases ‘healthcare’ and ‘waiting rooms’, and discounting those studies that addressed issues such as length of waiting times, the following databases were searched: CINAHL (Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature), Embase, Health Management Library, HMIC (Health Management Information Consortium), and PubMed. An iterative process was used to select 24 studies that were concerned with the way patients were affected by their surroundings while they waited to see a GP. Although not comprehensive, this literature search has found a broadly representative sample of the existing writings, the points of which are summarised below. Few people look forward to waiting1 and therefore the acknowledgement of patient anxiety and the value of stress-reducing ‘positive distractions’ is frequent. Positive distractions include views of nature, music, and visual art.2 It is argued that perceptions of the quality of care taken over the appearance of a waiting room can be a proxy for care taken over a patient’s health3,,4 and the literature has addressed seating arrangements,1 smell,5 decoration,6 with a view to conveying a sense of ‘homeyness’ that that according to Goelitz and Kahn7 ‘helps the space feel more like a living room’. Dilani8 sums up this approach by suggesting the adoption of a ‘salutogenic’ approach to health waiting spaces which focuses on ‘the factors that keep us well, rather than those that make us unwell’. The waiting period is, in the …

Highlights

  • Every day GP surgery waiting rooms are used by thousands of people, yet the experience of waiting and the nature of the waiting rooms in these surgeries has been neglected as a subject for critical attention

  • This research found attention to appearance in waiting rooms to be widespread, some of it less successful than others with ‘homey’ waiting rooms being adversely affected by stacks of leaflets on every surface

  • New facilities with plenty of light and air were somewhat compromised by out-of-order drinks machines, the sight of medical files, and reception areas with lines of sight obscured by computer monitors

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Summary

Methods

The approach to analysis was informed by Pauwel’s idea of photographs as ‘windows’ to the depicted world.[17] It is acknowledged, as indicated above that this data set is a unique construction of our making and began with an exploratory search for patterns. Honigmann[20] writes: ‘Pattern recognition begins with the anthropologist’s inspecting a series of things, field notes, or other fieldwork documents, including photographs and audiotapes, and abstracting from them one or more general features recognized in the event’. Using a collaborative, grounded theory approach[21] the photographs were coded into a series of categories

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