Do NHS walk-in centres in England provide a model of integrated care?

<b>Purpose:</b> To undertake a comprehensive evaluation of NHS walk-in centres against criteria of improved access, quality, user satisfaction and efficiency.<br><br> <b>Context:</b> Forty NHS walk-in centres have been opened in England, as part of the UK governme...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: C. Salisbury
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2003-08-01
Series:International Journal of Integrated Care
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ijic.org/articles/84
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spelling doaj-1562c674d02c445f8007715ea2e32f912020-11-25T00:39:18ZengUbiquity PressInternational Journal of Integrated Care1568-41562003-08-013310.5334/ijic.8484Do NHS walk-in centres in England provide a model of integrated care?C. Salisbury<b>Purpose:</b> To undertake a comprehensive evaluation of NHS walk-in centres against criteria of improved access, quality, user satisfaction and efficiency.<br><br> <b>Context:</b> Forty NHS walk-in centres have been opened in England, as part of the UK governments agenda to modernise the NHS. They are intended to improve access to primary care, provide high quality treatment at convenient times, and reduce inappropriate demand on other NHS providers. Care is provided by nurses rather than doctors, using computerised algorithms, and nurses use protocols to supply treatments previously only available from doctors.<br><br> <b>Data sources:</b> Several linked studies were conducted using different sources of data and methodologies. These included routinely collected data, site visits, patient interviews, a survey of users of walk-in centres, a study using simulated patients to assess quality of care, analysis of consultation rates in NHS services near to walk-in centres, and audit of compliance with protocols.<br><br> <b>Conclusion & discussion:</b> The findings illustrate many of the issues described in a recent WHO reflective paper on Integrated Care, including tensions between professional judgement and use of protocols, problems with incompatible IT systems, balancing users' demands and needs, the importance of understanding health professionals' roles and issues of technical versus allocative efficiency.http://www.ijic.org/articles/84integrated carehealth services, health care reformaccess to health careskill-mix
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author C. Salisbury
spellingShingle C. Salisbury
Do NHS walk-in centres in England provide a model of integrated care?
International Journal of Integrated Care
integrated care
health services, health care reform
access to health care
skill-mix
author_facet C. Salisbury
author_sort C. Salisbury
title Do NHS walk-in centres in England provide a model of integrated care?
title_short Do NHS walk-in centres in England provide a model of integrated care?
title_full Do NHS walk-in centres in England provide a model of integrated care?
title_fullStr Do NHS walk-in centres in England provide a model of integrated care?
title_full_unstemmed Do NHS walk-in centres in England provide a model of integrated care?
title_sort do nhs walk-in centres in england provide a model of integrated care?
publisher Ubiquity Press
series International Journal of Integrated Care
issn 1568-4156
publishDate 2003-08-01
description <b>Purpose:</b> To undertake a comprehensive evaluation of NHS walk-in centres against criteria of improved access, quality, user satisfaction and efficiency.<br><br> <b>Context:</b> Forty NHS walk-in centres have been opened in England, as part of the UK governments agenda to modernise the NHS. They are intended to improve access to primary care, provide high quality treatment at convenient times, and reduce inappropriate demand on other NHS providers. Care is provided by nurses rather than doctors, using computerised algorithms, and nurses use protocols to supply treatments previously only available from doctors.<br><br> <b>Data sources:</b> Several linked studies were conducted using different sources of data and methodologies. These included routinely collected data, site visits, patient interviews, a survey of users of walk-in centres, a study using simulated patients to assess quality of care, analysis of consultation rates in NHS services near to walk-in centres, and audit of compliance with protocols.<br><br> <b>Conclusion & discussion:</b> The findings illustrate many of the issues described in a recent WHO reflective paper on Integrated Care, including tensions between professional judgement and use of protocols, problems with incompatible IT systems, balancing users' demands and needs, the importance of understanding health professionals' roles and issues of technical versus allocative efficiency.
topic integrated care
health services, health care reform
access to health care
skill-mix
url http://www.ijic.org/articles/84
work_keys_str_mv AT csalisbury donhswalkincentresinenglandprovideamodelofintegratedcare
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