Sense-making strategies and help-seeking behaviours associated with urgent care services: a mixed-methods study

Author:

Turnbull Joanne1ORCID,McKenna Gemma1ORCID,Prichard Jane1ORCID,Rogers Anne2ORCID,Crouch Robert3ORCID,Lennon Andrew4ORCID,Pope Catherine1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Health Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK

2. National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care (CLAHRC) Wessex, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK

3. Emergency Department, University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust (UHS), Southampton, UK

4. Southern Headquarters, South Central Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust (SCAS), Winchester, UK

Abstract

BackgroundPolicy has been focused on reducing unnecessary emergency department attendances by providing more responsive urgent care services and guiding patients to ‘the right place’. The variety of services has created a complex urgent care landscape for people to access and navigate.ObjectivesTo describe how the public, providers and policy-makers define and make sense of urgent care; to explain how sense-making influences patients’ strategies and choices; to analyse patient ‘work’ in understanding, navigating and choosing urgent care; to explain urgent care utilisation; and to identify potentially modifiable factors in decision-making.DesignMixed-methods sequential design.SettingFour counties in southern England coterminous with a NHS 111 provider area.MethodsA literature review of policy and research combined with citizens’ panels and serial qualitative interviews. Four citizens’ panels were conducted with the public, health-care professionals, commissioners and managers (n = 41). Three populations were sampled for interview: people aged ≥ 75 years, people aged 18–26 years and East European people. In total, 134 interviews were conducted. Analyses were integrated to develop a conceptual model of urgent care help-seeking.FindingsThe literature review identified some consensus between policy and provider perspectives regarding the physiological factors that feature in conceptualisations of urgent care. However, the terms ‘urgent’ and ‘emergency’ lack specificity or consistency in meaning. Boundaries between urgent and emergency care are ill-defined. We constructed a typology that distinguishes three types of work that take place at both the individual and social network levels in relation to urgent care sense-making and help-seeking.Illness workinvolves interpretation and decision-making about the meaning, severity and management of physical symptoms and psychological states, and the assessment and management of possible risks. Help-seeking was guided bymoral work: the legitimation and sanctioning done by service users.Navigation workconcerned choosing and accessing services and relied on prior knowledge of what was available, accessible and acceptable. From these empirical data, we developed a model of urgent care sense-making and help-seeking behaviour that emphasises that work informs the interaction between what we think and feel about illness and the need to seek care (sense-making) and action – the decisions we take and how we use urgent care (help-seeking).LimitationsThe sample population of our three groups may not have adequately reflected a diverse range of views and experiences. The study enabled us to capture people’s views and self-reported service use rather than their actual behaviour.ConclusionsMuch of the policy surrounding urgent and emergency care is predicated on the notion that ‘urgent’ sits neatly between emergency and routine; however, service users in particular struggle to distinguish urgent from emergency or routine care. Rather than focusing on individual sense-making, future work should attend to social and temporal contexts that have an impact on help-seeking (e.g. why people find it more difficult to manage pain at night), and how different social networks shape service use.Future workA whole-systems approach considering integration across a wider network of partners is key to understanding the complex relationships between demand for and access to urgent care.Study registrationThis study is registered as UKCRN 32207.FundingThe National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery Research programme.

Funder

Health Services and Delivery Research (HS&DR) Programme

Publisher

National Institute for Health Research

Subject

General Economics, Econometrics and Finance

Reference250 articles.

1. NHS England. High Quality Care for All, Now and for Future Generations: Transforming Urgent and Emergency Care Services in England – Urgent and Emergency Care Review. End of Phase 1 Report. Leeds: NHS England; 2013. URL: www.england.nhs.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/urg-emerg-care-ev-bse.pdf (accessed 16 May 2018).

2. Department of Health and Social Care. NHS Next Stage Review. Our Vision for Primary and Community Care. London: Department of Health and Social Care; 2008.

3. NHS England Urgent and Emergency Care Review Team and Emergency Care Intensive Support Team. Transforming Urgent and Emergency Care Services in England – Update on the Urgent and Emergency Care Review. Leeds: NHS England; 2014.

4. Out-of-hours care in western countries: assessment of different organizational models;Huibers;BMC Health Serv Res,2009

5. Urgent care centers in the US: findings from a national survey;Weick;BMC Health Serv Res,2009

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