Freya Davies, Michelle Edwards, Delyth Price, Pippa Anderson, Andrew Carson-Stevens, Mazhar Choudhry, Matthew Cooke, Jeremy Dale, Liam Donaldson, Bridie Angela Evans, Barbara Harrington, Shaun Harris, Julie Hepburn, Peter Hibbert, Thomas Hughes, Faris Hussain, Saiful Islam, Rhys Pockett, Alison Porter, Aloysius Niroshan Siriwardena, Helen Snooks, Alan Watkins, Adrian Edwards, Alison Cooper
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Many patients presenting to emergency departments could be managed by general practitioners in general practitioner-emergency department service models.</p><p><strong>Objectives: </strong>To evaluate the effectiveness, safety, patient experience and system implications of the different general practitioner-emergency department models.</p><p><strong>Design: </strong>Mixed-methods realist evaluation.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>Phase 1 (2017-8), to understand current practice: rapid realist literature review, national survey and follow-up key informant interviews, national stakeholder event and safety data analysis. Phase 2 (2018-21), to collect and analyse qualitative (observations, interviews) and quantitative data (time series analysis); cost-consequences analysis of routine data; and case site data for 'marker condition' analysis from a purposive sample of 13 case sites in England and Wales. Phase 3 (2021-2), to conduct mixed-methods analysis for programme theory and toolkit development.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>General practitioners commonly work in emergency departments, but delivery models vary widely in terms of the scope of the general practitioner role and the scale of the general practitioner service. We developed a taxonomy to describe general practitioner-emergency department service models (Integrated with the emergency department service, Parallel within the emergency department, Outside the emergency department on the hospital site) and present a programme theory as principal output of the study to describe how these service models were observed to operate. Routine data were of variable quality, limiting our analysis. Time series analysis demonstrated trends across intervention sites for: increased time spent in the emergency department; increased emergency department attendances and reattendances; and mixed results for hospital admissions. Evidence on patient experience was limited but broadly supportive; we identified department-level processes to optimise the safety of general practitioner-emergency department models.</p><p><strong>Limitations: </strong>The quality, heterogeneity and extent of routine emergency department data collection during the study period limited the conclusions. Recruitment was limited by criteria for case sites (time series requirements) and individual patients (with 'marker conditions'). Pandemic and other pressures limited data collection for marker condition analysis. Data collected and analysed were pre pandemic; new approaches such as 'telephone first' and their relevance to our findings remains unexplored.</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>Findings suggest that general practitioner-emergency department service models do not meet the aim of reducing the overall emergency department waiting times and improving patient flow with limited evidence of cost savings. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景:急诊医疗服务正面临着巨大的压力,以满足日益增长的患者需求。在全科医生-急诊科服务模式中,许多到急诊科就诊的病人可以由全科医生管理:评估不同的全科医生-急诊科模式的有效性、安全性、患者体验和对系统的影响:混合方法现实主义评估:第一阶段(2017-8 年),了解当前实践:快速现实主义文献综述、全国调查和后续关键信息提供者访谈、全国利益相关者活动和安全数据分析。第 2 阶段(2018-21 年),收集和分析定性数据(观察、访谈)和定量数据(时间序列分析);常规数据的成本后果分析;以及英格兰和威尔士 13 个案例点的有目的性样本中用于 "标记条件 "分析的案例点数据。第 3 阶段(2021-2 年),对计划理论和工具包开发进行混合方法分析:结果:全科医生通常在急诊科工作,但在全科医生的职责范围和全科医生服务的规模方面,服务模式却大相径庭。我们制定了一个分类法来描述全科医生-急诊科服务模式(与急诊科服务整合、急诊科内并行、急诊科在医院外),并提出了一个方案理论作为研究的主要成果,以描述这些服务模式是如何运作的。常规数据质量参差不齐,限制了我们的分析。时间序列分析表明了各干预地点在以下方面的趋势:在急诊科花费的时间增加;急诊科就诊人次和再次就诊人次增加;住院人次方面的结果不一。有关患者体验的证据有限,但总体上是支持性的;我们确定了科室层面的流程,以优化全科医生-急诊科模式的安全性:局限性:研究期间急诊科常规数据收集的质量、异质性和范围限制了结论的得出。病例地点(时间序列要求)和个体患者(具有 "标记条件")的标准限制了招募工作。大流行和其他压力限制了标记条件分析的数据收集。收集和分析的数据是大流行前的数据;"电话先行 "等新方法及其与我们的研究结果的相关性仍有待探讨:研究结果表明,全科医生-急诊科服务模式并不能达到缩短急诊科总体等候时间和改善患者流量的目的,而且节约成本的证据也很有限。定性数据表明,全科医生作为更广泛的急诊科团队成员通常受到重视。我们根据研究结果开发了一个工具包,为实施和提供全科医生-急诊科服务提供指导:今后的工作:急诊护理数据集已在英格兰全国范围内推出,以帮助实现数据收集的标准化,从而促进进一步的研究。我们提倡在常规护理中系统地收集患者体验指标和患者报告结果指标。还可以开展更多工作来支持急诊科全科医生角色的发展,包括一套核心能力和管理结构,以反映不同的全科医生-急诊科模式,并评估其有效性和成本效益,为未来的政策提供指导:本研究已注册为 PROSPERO CRD42017069741:该奖项由国家健康与护理研究所(NIHR)的健康与社会护理服务研究计划(NIHR奖项编号:15/145/04)资助,全文发表于《健康与社会护理服务研究》(Health and Social Care Delivery Research)第12卷第10期。更多奖项信息,请访问 NIHR Funding and Awards 网站。
Evaluation of different models of general practitioners working in or alongside emergency departments: a mixed-methods realist evaluation.
Background: Emergency healthcare services are under intense pressure to meet increasing patient demands. Many patients presenting to emergency departments could be managed by general practitioners in general practitioner-emergency department service models.
Objectives: To evaluate the effectiveness, safety, patient experience and system implications of the different general practitioner-emergency department models.
Design: Mixed-methods realist evaluation.
Methods: Phase 1 (2017-8), to understand current practice: rapid realist literature review, national survey and follow-up key informant interviews, national stakeholder event and safety data analysis. Phase 2 (2018-21), to collect and analyse qualitative (observations, interviews) and quantitative data (time series analysis); cost-consequences analysis of routine data; and case site data for 'marker condition' analysis from a purposive sample of 13 case sites in England and Wales. Phase 3 (2021-2), to conduct mixed-methods analysis for programme theory and toolkit development.
Results: General practitioners commonly work in emergency departments, but delivery models vary widely in terms of the scope of the general practitioner role and the scale of the general practitioner service. We developed a taxonomy to describe general practitioner-emergency department service models (Integrated with the emergency department service, Parallel within the emergency department, Outside the emergency department on the hospital site) and present a programme theory as principal output of the study to describe how these service models were observed to operate. Routine data were of variable quality, limiting our analysis. Time series analysis demonstrated trends across intervention sites for: increased time spent in the emergency department; increased emergency department attendances and reattendances; and mixed results for hospital admissions. Evidence on patient experience was limited but broadly supportive; we identified department-level processes to optimise the safety of general practitioner-emergency department models.
Limitations: The quality, heterogeneity and extent of routine emergency department data collection during the study period limited the conclusions. Recruitment was limited by criteria for case sites (time series requirements) and individual patients (with 'marker conditions'). Pandemic and other pressures limited data collection for marker condition analysis. Data collected and analysed were pre pandemic; new approaches such as 'telephone first' and their relevance to our findings remains unexplored.
Conclusion: Findings suggest that general practitioner-emergency department service models do not meet the aim of reducing the overall emergency department waiting times and improving patient flow with limited evidence of cost savings. Qualitative data indicated that general practitioners were often valued as members of the wider emergency department team. We have developed a toolkit, based on our findings, to provide guidance for implementing and delivering general practitioner-emergency department services.
Future work: The emergency care data set has since been introduced across England to help standardise data collection to facilitate further research. We would advocate the systematic capture of patient experience measures and patient-reported outcome measures as part of routine care. More could be done to support the development of the general practitioner in emergency department role, including a core set of competencies and governance structure, to reflect the different general practitioner-emergency department models and to evaluate the effectiveness and cost effectiveness to guide future policy.
Study registration: This study is registered as PROSPERO CRD42017069741.
Funding: This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme (NIHR award ref: 15/145/04) and is published in full in Health and Social Care Delivery Research; Vol. 12, No. 10. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.