TY - JOUR
T1 - Eliciting preferences of the community for out of hours care provided by general practitioners
T2 - a stated preference discrete choice experiment
AU - Scott, Anthony
AU - Watson, M. Stuart
AU - Ross, Sue
N1 - Funding Information:
Thanks go to Nicola Torrance for collecting data, and to the staff of G-DOCs and GEMS. Thanks also go to anonymous referees and Cristina Ubach for helpful comments. This project was funded by the NHS R&D Primary–Secondary Care Interface Programme. The Health Economics and Health Services Research Units are funded by the Chief Scientist Office of the Scottish Executive Health Department (SEHD). The views in this paper are those of the authors and not SEHD.
PY - 2003/2
Y1 - 2003/2
N2 - Access to primary care services is a major issue as new models of delivering primary care continue develop in many countries. Major changes to out of hours care provided by general practitioners (GPs) were made in the UK in 1995. These were designed in response to low morale and job dissatisfaction of GPs, rather than in response to patients' preferences. The aim of this study is to elicit the preferences of patients and the community for different models of GP out of hours care. A questionnaire was sent to parents of children in Aberdeen and Glasgow in Scotland who had received a home visit or attended a primary care emergency centre, or were registered with a GP. The questionnaire used a discrete choice experiment that asked parents to imagine their child had respiratory symptoms. Parents were then asked to choose between a series of pairs of scenarios, with each scenario describing a different model of out of hours care. Each model varied by waiting time, who was seen, location, and whether the doctor listened. The response rate was 68% (3893/5718). The most important attribute was whether the doctor seemed to listen, suggesting that policies aimed at improving doctor-patient communication will lead to the largest improvements in utility. The most preferred location of care was a hospital accident and emergency department. This suggests that new models of primary care emergency centres may not reduce the demand for accident and emergency visits from this group of patients in urban areas. Preferences also differed across sub-groups of patients. Those who had never used out of hours care before had stronger preferences for waiting time and the doctor listening, suggesting higher expectations of non-users. Further research is required into the demand for out of hours care as new models of care become established.
AB - Access to primary care services is a major issue as new models of delivering primary care continue develop in many countries. Major changes to out of hours care provided by general practitioners (GPs) were made in the UK in 1995. These were designed in response to low morale and job dissatisfaction of GPs, rather than in response to patients' preferences. The aim of this study is to elicit the preferences of patients and the community for different models of GP out of hours care. A questionnaire was sent to parents of children in Aberdeen and Glasgow in Scotland who had received a home visit or attended a primary care emergency centre, or were registered with a GP. The questionnaire used a discrete choice experiment that asked parents to imagine their child had respiratory symptoms. Parents were then asked to choose between a series of pairs of scenarios, with each scenario describing a different model of out of hours care. Each model varied by waiting time, who was seen, location, and whether the doctor listened. The response rate was 68% (3893/5718). The most important attribute was whether the doctor seemed to listen, suggesting that policies aimed at improving doctor-patient communication will lead to the largest improvements in utility. The most preferred location of care was a hospital accident and emergency department. This suggests that new models of primary care emergency centres may not reduce the demand for accident and emergency visits from this group of patients in urban areas. Preferences also differed across sub-groups of patients. Those who had never used out of hours care before had stronger preferences for waiting time and the doctor listening, suggesting higher expectations of non-users. Further research is required into the demand for out of hours care as new models of care become established.
KW - Discrete choice experiments
KW - General practice
KW - Out of hours
KW - Patients' preferences
KW - Scotland
KW - UK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0037307092&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/S0277-9536(02)00079-5
DO - 10.1016/S0277-9536(02)00079-5
M3 - Article
C2 - 12560013
AN - SCOPUS:0037307092
SN - 0277-9536
VL - 56
SP - 803
EP - 814
JO - Social Science & Medicine
JF - Social Science & Medicine
IS - 4
ER -