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. 2010 Oct;56(10):e361-7.

Advanced access appointments: Effects on family physician satisfaction, physicians' office income, and emergency department use

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Advanced access appointments: Effects on family physician satisfaction, physicians' office income, and emergency department use

John C Hudec et al. Can Fam Physician. 2010 Oct.

Abstract

Objective: To examine the effects of advanced access (same-day physician appointments) on patient and provider satisfaction and to determine its association with other variables such as physician income and patient emergency department use.

Design: Patient satisfaction survey and semistructured interviews with physicians and support staff; analysis of physician medical insurance billings and patient emergency department visits.

Setting: Cape Breton, NS.

Participants: Patients, physicians, and support staff of 3 comparable family physician practices that had not implemented advanced access and an established advanced access practice.

Main outcome measures: Self-reported provider and patient satisfaction, physician office income, and patients' emergency department use.

Results: The key benefits of implementation of advanced access were an increase in provider and patient satisfaction levels, same or greater physician office income, and fewer less urgent (triage level 4) and nonurgent (triage level 5) emergency department visits by patients.

Conclusion: Currently within the Central Cape Breton Region, 33% of patients wait 4 or more days for urgent appointments. Findings from this study can be used to enhance primary care physician practice redesign. This research supports many benefits of transitioning to an advanced access model of patient booking.

OBJECTIF: Examiner les effets d’un accès rapide (rendez-vous avec le médecin le jour même) sur la satisfaction des patients et des soignants, et déterminer si cela influence d’autres variables telles le revenu du médecin et le recours aux départements d’urgence.

TYPE D’ÉTUDE: Enquête sur la satisfaction des patients et entrevues semi-structurées avec les médecins et le personnel du bureau; analyse de la facturation du médecin à l’assurance maladie; et nombre de visites des patients aux services des urgences.

CONTEXTE: Cap Breton, Nouvelle-Écosse.

PARTICIPANTS: Patients, médecins et personnel de soutien de trois cliniques de médecine familiale comparables qui n’avaient pas instauré l’accès rapide et n’utilisaient pas déjà ce mode de pratique.

PRINCIPAUX PARAMÈTRES À L’ÉTUDE: Degré de satisfaction déclarée par les soignants et les patients, revenu de bureau des médecins et utilisation des services des urgences par les patients.

RÉSULTATS: Les avantages principaux de l’instauration d’un accès rapide au médecin étaient une augmentation du degré de satisfaction des soignants et des patients, un revenu égal ou augmenté pour le médecin et moins de visites des patients aux services des urgences pour des conditions moins urgentes (niveau 4 au triage) et non urgentes (niveau 5 au triage).

CONCLUSION: Présentement, dans la région centrale du Cap Breton, 33 % des patients attendent au moins 4 jours pour un rendez-vous urgent. Les données de cette étude devraient promouvoir des changements dans la pratique des médecins de première ligne. Cette étude indique qu’il y a beaucoup d’avantages à instaurer un tel mode d’accès rapide pour la prise de rendez-vous.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Comparison of patient booking models Adapted from Murray and Tantau.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Research schematic
Figure 3
Figure 3
Reported benefits of advanced access

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References

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