Author:
French Lydia RM,Turner Katrina M,Morley Hannah,Goldsworthy Lisa,Sharp Debbie J,Hamilton-Shield Julian
Abstract
BackgroundChildren who do not attend (DNA) their hospital outpatient appointments are a concern because this potentially compromises the child’s health and incurs financial cost. Little is known about children who DNA or the views of GPs to non-attendance.AimTo describe the characteristics of children who DNA hospital paediatric outpatient appointments, and explore how GPs view and respond to DNAs.Design and settingA mixed methods study of data from all new referrals to a children’s hospital in the South West of England between 1 September and 31 October 2012.MethodData were extracted from patients’ hospital and GP records, and Stata was used to analyse the data quantitatively. Analysis focused on describing the characteristics of children who DNA, and the process of care that followed. Practices that had either the highest or lowest number of DNAs were purposefully sampled for GPs who had referred children to secondary care at the study hospital within the previous year. Interviews were held between May 2014 and July 2015, and were analysed thematically.ResultsChildren who DNA are more likely to be from an area of greater deprivation (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] 1.02, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.00 to 1.02, P = 0.04), and with a child protection alert in their hospital notes (AOR 2.72, 95% CI = 1.26 to 5.88, P = 0.01). Non-attendance is communicated poorly to GPs, rarely coded in patients’ GP records, and few GP practices have a formal policy regarding paediatric DNAs.ConclusionNon-attendance at hospital outpatient appointments may indicate a child’s welfare is at risk. Communication between primary and secondary care needs to be improved, and guidelines developed to encourage GPs to monitor children who DNA.
Publisher
Royal College of General Practitioners
Reference21 articles.
1. Health and Social Care Information Centre (2013) Hospital outpatient activity — April 2012 to March 2013. Provider level analysis (NHS HSCIC).
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5. Health and Social Care Information Centre Provisional monthly topic of interest: outpatient did not attend (DNA) appointment. http://www.hscic.gov.uk/catalogue/PUB14316/prov-mont-hes-admi-outp-ae-April%202013%20to%20March%202014-toi-rep.pdf (accessed 17 May 2017).
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