Jessie Weaver, MD, CCFP; Christa Kozanczyn, MD, CCFP; Anwar Parbtani PhD, MD, CCFP

Similar documents
Health Quality Ontario: Optimizing provincial feedback programs

Nurses Perceptions of Error Reporting and Disclosure in Nursing Homes Error Reporting Found to be Very Difficult for Nurses in Nursing Home Settings

Perceptions of the role of the hospital palliative care team

Access to the Best Care Urgent Care Centre

Seven Day Working: in Practice Clinicians Perspective. Jonathan Vickers Consultant surgeon Dec 2015

Employers are essential partners in monitoring the practice

GP Social Enterprise led Call Handling & Nurse Triage Project

LESSON 7-1 CAPSTONE ACTIVITY

Conflict of Interest. College of Physicians and Surgeons of British Columbia

16 th Annual National Report Card on Health Care

Heidi Alexander MP, Shadow Secretary of State for Health, Speech to Unite the Union s Health Sector Conference (23/11/2015)

EMERGENCY MEDICINE TRAINING AND PRACTICE IN CANADA: Celebrating the Past and Evolving the Future

Guidelines for Telepractice in Occupational Therapy

Health Professionals and Official- Language Minorities in Canada

Perceptions of Adding Nurse Practitioners to Primary Care Teams

Research Brief. Privately Insured People s Use of Emergency Departments: Perception of Urgency is Reality for Patients

NHS WALES: MIDWIFERY WORKFORCE PLANNING PROJECT

The Art and Science of Evidence-Based Decision-Making Epidemiology Can Help!

Strengthening Public Health Nutrition Practice in Canada: Recommendations for Action

ACCREDITATION APPLICATION APPROVAL PROCESS

Dietitians of Canada (Ontario) Response to. The Health Professions Regulatory Advisory Council. Interprofessional Collaboration Discussion Guide

Trait Anxiety and Hardiness among Junior Baccalaureate Nursing students living in a Stressful Environment

Hospitalist Scheduling: how can a balance be reached?

Hard Decisions / Hard News:

A guide for Consumers MAKING MEDICAL DECISIONS FOR ANOTHER PERSON. Includes information about the form,

16 Pharmacy Technician Julie Yandt.

Developing Public Health Policy Research Frameworks with Concept Mapping

Sunrise Regional Health Authority

AUDIT SECTION 1: SUMMARY

Toward Patient-Centric Marketing

NP Patient Panel Study

September 26-27, 2017 Toronto, ON 2017 ATTENDEE LIST

Evaluation of Telestroke Services

PET Steering Committee Meeting Minutes. Wednesday, January 21, 2015 Time: 2:00 4:00 pm

The Agency for Co-operative Housing 2015 Client Satisfaction Survey. Prepared by TNS Canada. December 21, 2015

CENTRAL LHIN CEO REPORT CORRESPONDENCE

Report on the 2011 SHPCA Survey of Palliative Care Providers

Wisconsin Homecare Organization

Do We Want to Know about patients perceptions of care? Insights from implementation science

Low Acuity Emergency Department Visits. Joanna Cohen, MD June 2018

SUE Research Proposal

Advancing Social Purpose in Advanced Education Administration and Finance Functions to Strengthen Social Infrastructure in Canada

UNDERSTANDING DETERMINANTS OF OUTCOMES IN COMPLEX CONTINUING CARE

HRPA s Regulatory Framework: Regulating the Human Resources Profession in Ontario

Your local NHS and you

Improving Access to Specialty Care. Janet M. Coffman, MPP, PhD Center for the Health Professions Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies

Community Mental Health Patient Survey Report written by: Director of Operations / Compliance Manager Lead officer:

Implementing NHS Services Seven Days a Week

Does Having a Unit-Based Nurse Practitioner Increase Nurses Level of Satisfaction with Patient Care Delivery? Patricia Meyer, DNP, CRNP, NE-BC

10/20/2015 INTRODUCTION. Why Nursing Satisfaction Is Important

Reducing Stress. Changing Health Behaviors for the Better. Reducing Stress. What You ll Learn. What Exactly is Stress?

Thank you for joining us today!

Addendum 2 to DOH Immunizations Marketing Campaign. This addendum serves as notice of the following answers provided by the Department:

Champlain BASE Service: Building Access to Specialists through econsultation

Awareness and Acceptance of the Nurse Practitioner Role in One BC Health Authority

Health and Health Care in the 21st Century WAVE 1 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Issue Brief. Redefining Frequent Emergency Department Users

CFPC Board of Directors Meeting Motions and Outcomes

September 20, Re: Input on the Controlled Act of Psychotherapy to HPRAC. Dear Mr. Corcoran,

Niagara Health Public Opinion Poll 2016

MODULE 01 INTRO TO RN & RPN PRACTICE: THE CLIENT, THE NURSE AND THE ENVIRONMENT

Team-based Care: Answering the Call in Academic Medicine. Scott Shipman, MD, MPH Director of Primary Care Affairs and Workforce Analysis

Long Term Care Nurses Feelings on Communication, Teamwork and Stress in Long Term Care

Advance Care Planning in Canada: Synthesis of Tools. March 22, 2010

The Professional Practice Series

Question Patient #1 Patient #2 Patient #3 Patient #4 Patient #5 Number of days between the last discharge and this readmission date?

Guide to the Canadian Environmental Assessment Registry

Your Health Visiting Service

UNDERGRADUATE NURSING STUDENT PERCEPTIONS OF A SUPERVISED SELF-DIRECTED LEARNING LABORATORY: A STRATEGY TO ENHANCE WORKPLACE READINESS

Chase Farm Paediatric Assessment Unit Frequently Asked Questions October 2016

Health Care, Settlement, Social Services and Education Information for Canadians Returning from Haiti

Tri-Agency Data Management Policy Initiative. Matthew Lucas, PhD. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council.

Overview. Caregiverosis. The Caregiving Role. The Caregiving Role 3/20/2013. The Dementia Care Triad: Understanding the Partnership

Story Street Walk-in Service

RACGP Submission to Developing a National Antimicrobial Resistance Strategy for Australia

Nursing Policy Secretariat Priority Recommendations

Our Proposals for the Implementation of Urology Services in Western and Northern Trusts

Regional Complex Continuing Care Review: Final Report and Recommendations

Health System Action Plan: Injectable Sodium Bicarbonate Shortage and Recall Health System Emergency Management Branch June 26, 2017

Assess, Treat and Refer Initiatives and Trends in EMS: A Review of Literature.

What Canadians Think Do we really know?

The Commissioning of Hospice Care in England in 2014/15 July 2014

Occupational and Gendered Differences of Firefighter/Paramedics and Emergency Room Nurses

CIRCLE OF CARE. Ann Cavoukian, Ph.D. Information and Privacy Commissioner, Ontario, Canada

Drug Safety and Effectiveness. Canadian Association for Population Therapeutics April 21, 2009

Welcome to the SIS Clinic

Financial burden of cancer for the caregiver

QUEBEC INNOVATIONS TO IMPROVE ACCESS TO PRIMARY HEALTHCARE. Mylaine Breton, PhD

Royal College of Surgeons of Canada Maintenance of Competence Program

Implementation of community-based crisis model

Workload Models. Hospitalist Consulting Solutions White Paper Series

Kentucky Stroke Transitions Assistance Resource

Reasons for Patient Preference of Primary Care Provider Type Session T239 November 12, Margaret Gradison, MD, MHS-CL, FAAFP

European Working Time Directive

This is the published version of a paper published in Journal of Asian Midwifes (JAM). Citation for the original published paper (version of record):

Evaluation of the Primary Care Virtual Ward Model Preliminary Progress Report

NURSES ASSOCIATION OF NEW BRUNSWICK 2015

Evidence Based Practice. Dorothea Orem s Self Care Deficit Theory

Organizational and System Factors the Influence NP Patient Panel Size in Primary Care

CONSENSUS FRAMEWORK FOR ETHICAL COLLABORATION

Transcription:

Jessie Weaver, MD, CCFP; Christa Kozanczyn, MD, CCFP; Anwar Parbtani PhD, MD, CCFP Family Medicine Teaching Unit, Royal Victoria Regional Health Centre, Barrie and DFCM, University of Toronto

DISCLOSURES: This study or investigators did not receive funding or other support from commercial/ industrial agencies. There was no real or perceived conflict of interest. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS: RVH Research Ethics Board for advise and approval of this study. Dr. Monica Wolnik, Director of the Huronia UCC, Barrie and all physicians and staff at the HUCC, Barrie

As per Statistics Canada, 4.4 million (15.3%) Canadians did not have a primary care provider (PCP) in 2011. 61.6% of this population used walk-in clinics and 12.8% used hospital emergency departments (ED) for their ailments. There is an implication that not having a PCP is the main reason for the walk-in clinic and ED overuse, but many studies have refuted this assumption.

While numerous studies are available, assessing the determinants and patterns of Walk-in Clinic and Emergency Department use, studies determining the use of specific Urgent Care Clinics are rare. Such studies would help us to better organize our clinics/practices, and would help with an appropriate utilization of resources to better serve our communities.

To examine patients reasons for accessing care from an urgent care clinic (UCC) vs their own PCP. To examine whether the UCC was actually utilized as an URGENT care centre vs as any other walk-in clinic. To examine whether having a PCP or not was a factor for the use of the UCC. For patient with a PCP; to determine whether access to the PCP was a determinant of the UCC use.

Design: A prospective, cross sectional survey (a ten questionnaire survey Setting: A mid-size Ontario city, with 80+ PCP, one UCC, four regular walk-in clinics, and a hospital based emergency department. Patients: Patients over the age of 18 years attending the urgent-care clinic between January and March, 2013. Target: 300 completed surveys.

Note: Only 11% of the patients used the Urgent Care Clinic for specific medical reason requiring urgent attention; the rest used it as any other Walk-in Clinic. Reason for Choosing the UCC 14% Proximity Good service Hours/Wait times 11% 36% 39%

PERCEIVED ACUITY REASONS FOR VISITS 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% Acuity 1-3 Acuity 4-6 Acuity 7-10 ENT Resp Other 6% 16% 13% 10% Injury Pain/Joint GI 32% 23% 10% 0%

Sixty three percent of patients (n=184) had a PCP (a family physicians or a NP). However, only 37% (p<0.001) called their PCP prior to the visit. Of those who did not call their PCP: 47% assumed unavailability 27% assumed that they would not get a timely appointment.

Of the 37% of patients with PCP, who did call their PCP: 14% were told to seek help at a walkin clinic or the Urgent Care Clinic. 26% got an appointment, which they considered to be too remote.

61% of patients who could not get an appointment with PCP cited the following reasons: 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 Busy Line (15%) Physician Away (27%) No Opening (19%)

Interestingly, assumptions of physicians unavailability and remote appointments were not far from reality ( p=0.1; p=0.9 respectively). Thus inaccessibility of the PCP was not only a perception, but a reality!

By James Chapman PUBLISHED: 22:02 GMT, 20 May 2013 (U.K.) The GPs who don't even know your name..: Health minister to launch attack on failings of inaccessible family doctors Jeremy Hunt will use speech to condemn scandal of out-of-hours services.

By James Chapman; PUBLISHED: 22:02 GMT, 20 May 2013 In a major speech, the Health Secretary will condemn the scandal of out-of-hours services where you speak to a doctor who doesn t know you from Adam..he will insist family doctors must once again take ultimate responsibility for round-the-clock care.

Correct the misperception that walk-in clinic or UCC use means bad medicine! Educate patients about the real acuity of their ailments. Implement the Advance Booking models Utilize partners in health care provision (Nurse Practitioners, Physician Assistants) to cope with the immediate access requests.

The Urgent Care Clinic was being used as any other walk-in clinic by a large majority of users (89%). For patients who had a PCP, major determinants for the clinic use were: perceived and real unavailability of their PCP. Inability to obtain timely appointments.

Another key determinant for the UCC use seemed to be the perceived high acuity/urgency of the medical condition. TeleHealth was rarely approached (a grossly underused service in Ontario).