Where are all the veterans? A mixed methods assessment of a systematic strategy to increase veteran registration in UK primary healthcare practices

Author:

Finnegan Alan,Randles RebeccaORCID

Abstract

ObjectivesTo identify effective initiatives to increase veteran registration in UK primary healthcare (PHC) practices.DesignA structured and systematic strategy was designed to improve the number of military veterans correctly coded within PHC. A mixed methods approach was adopted to evaluate the impact. PHC staff provided anonymised patient medical record data that used Read and Systematised Nomenclature of Medicine - Clinical Terms codes to identify the number of veterans within each PHC practice. This included baseline data, then scheduled further information after two phases of internal advertisement and two phases of external advertisement of different initiatives intended to raise veteran registration. Qualitative data was acquired through post-project interviews with PHC staff to ascertain the effectiveness, benefits, problems and means for improvement. A modified Grounded theory was used for the 12 staff interviews.Setting and participantsTwelve PHC practices in Cheshire, England, participated in this research study with a combined total of 138 098 patients. Data was collected between 01 September 2020 until 28 February 2021.ResultsOverall, veteran registration increased by 218.1% (N=1311). Estimated coverage of veterans increased from a coverage of 9.3% to a coverage of 29.5%. There was an increased population coverage ranging from 5.0% to 54.1%. The staff interviews revealed improved staff commitment and their taking ownership of the responsibility to improve veteran registration. The primary challenge was the COVID-19 pandemic, in particular the significantly reduced footfall and the communication opportunities and interface with patients.ConclusionsManaging an advertising campaign and improving veteran registration during a pandemic caused huge problems, but it also presented opportunities. Enabling a significant increase in PHC registration during the harshest and most testing conditions indicates that the accomplished achievements have substantial merit for wider adoption and impact.

Funder

Forces in Mind Trust

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

Reference22 articles.

1. National Health Service . Primary care. 2022. Available: https://www.england.nhs.uk/five-year-forward-view/next-steps-on-the-nhs-five-year-forward-view/primary-care/ [Accessed 3 Oct 2022].

2. Ministry of Defence . Population projections: UK armed forces veterans residing in great Britain 2016 to 2028. 2019. Available: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/population-projections-uk-armed-forces-veterans-residing-in-great-britain-2016-to-2028

3. NHS . Who counts as a veteran? Veterans, service leavers, and non-mobilised reservists. 2021.

4. Finding the Forgotten: Motivating Military Veterans to Register with a Primary Healthcare Practice

5. Apathy is associated with executive functioning in first episode psychosis

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