Good communication was valued as more important than accessibility according to 707 Nordic primary care patients: a report from the QUALICOPC study

Objective To explore Nordic patients’ ranking of the importance of different aspects of general practice. Design Patients ranked the importance of 47 statements reflecting five quality domains: communication, involvement, accessibility, continuity, and comprehensiveness. Setting Nordic general pract...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Torunn Bjerve Eide, Jørund Straand, Anja Maria Braend
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2021-07-01
Series:Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2021.1928837
id doaj-418a25a022c343839a636cacf6fac09f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-418a25a022c343839a636cacf6fac09f2021-10-04T13:56:59ZengTaylor & Francis GroupScandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care0281-34321502-77242021-07-0139329630410.1080/02813432.2021.19288371928837Good communication was valued as more important than accessibility according to 707 Nordic primary care patients: a report from the QUALICOPC studyTorunn Bjerve Eide0Jørund Straand1Anja Maria Braend2Department. of general practice, Institute of Health and Society, University of OsloDepartment. of general practice, Institute of Health and Society, University of OsloDepartment. of general practice, Institute of Health and Society, University of OsloObjective To explore Nordic patients’ ranking of the importance of different aspects of general practice. Design Patients ranked the importance of 47 statements reflecting five quality domains: communication, involvement, accessibility, continuity, and comprehensiveness. Setting Nordic general practice. Subjects Patients ≥18 years in general practitioners waiting rooms. Main outcome measures Items rated as important or very important by ≥ 90% in all countries were identified. Associations with patient characteristics were analysed by logistic regression. Results 209 Danish, 175 Norwegian, 129 Finnish, 112 Swedish and 82 Icelandic patients responded. Ten statements were ranked as important or very important by ≥90% in each country. Six pertained to communication, three to patient involvement and one to the comprehensiveness of care. No items regarding accessibility or continuity exceeded the 90% limit. The item most frequently rated as very important was ‘I understand what the GP explains’’. Female patients were more likely to value personal treatment (OR = 2.9; 95%CI 1.5–5.5) and receiving instructions if things went wrong (1.7; 1.2–2.2). Older patients >65 years put less emphasis than those <35 on whether the GP takes them seriously (0.4; 0.3–0.5) and on the importance of instructions (0.5; 0.4–0.7). Patients with chronic diseases were less concerned (0.6; 0.4–0.8) with receiving instructions, but valued strongly that a GP knows when to refer (2.2; 1.5–3.3). Conclusion Patients in all countries assigned high value to good communication. Availability was deemed important but came secondary to good communication. Implications Organisational framework for general practice must allow for acceptable communication quality as well as availability.Key points In order to identify relevant service areas for quality improvement in primary care, we aimed to increase knowledge of patient ranked importance of different dimensions of care. Nordic primary care patients valued good communication and involvement in decisions higher than accessibility to care. A singular focus on the access of care when developing services may not be in accordance with patient preferences.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2021.1928837general practicequalicopcdelivery of health carepatient preferencenordic countries
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Torunn Bjerve Eide
Jørund Straand
Anja Maria Braend
spellingShingle Torunn Bjerve Eide
Jørund Straand
Anja Maria Braend
Good communication was valued as more important than accessibility according to 707 Nordic primary care patients: a report from the QUALICOPC study
Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care
general practice
qualicopc
delivery of health care
patient preference
nordic countries
author_facet Torunn Bjerve Eide
Jørund Straand
Anja Maria Braend
author_sort Torunn Bjerve Eide
title Good communication was valued as more important than accessibility according to 707 Nordic primary care patients: a report from the QUALICOPC study
title_short Good communication was valued as more important than accessibility according to 707 Nordic primary care patients: a report from the QUALICOPC study
title_full Good communication was valued as more important than accessibility according to 707 Nordic primary care patients: a report from the QUALICOPC study
title_fullStr Good communication was valued as more important than accessibility according to 707 Nordic primary care patients: a report from the QUALICOPC study
title_full_unstemmed Good communication was valued as more important than accessibility according to 707 Nordic primary care patients: a report from the QUALICOPC study
title_sort good communication was valued as more important than accessibility according to 707 nordic primary care patients: a report from the qualicopc study
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care
issn 0281-3432
1502-7724
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Objective To explore Nordic patients’ ranking of the importance of different aspects of general practice. Design Patients ranked the importance of 47 statements reflecting five quality domains: communication, involvement, accessibility, continuity, and comprehensiveness. Setting Nordic general practice. Subjects Patients ≥18 years in general practitioners waiting rooms. Main outcome measures Items rated as important or very important by ≥ 90% in all countries were identified. Associations with patient characteristics were analysed by logistic regression. Results 209 Danish, 175 Norwegian, 129 Finnish, 112 Swedish and 82 Icelandic patients responded. Ten statements were ranked as important or very important by ≥90% in each country. Six pertained to communication, three to patient involvement and one to the comprehensiveness of care. No items regarding accessibility or continuity exceeded the 90% limit. The item most frequently rated as very important was ‘I understand what the GP explains’’. Female patients were more likely to value personal treatment (OR = 2.9; 95%CI 1.5–5.5) and receiving instructions if things went wrong (1.7; 1.2–2.2). Older patients >65 years put less emphasis than those <35 on whether the GP takes them seriously (0.4; 0.3–0.5) and on the importance of instructions (0.5; 0.4–0.7). Patients with chronic diseases were less concerned (0.6; 0.4–0.8) with receiving instructions, but valued strongly that a GP knows when to refer (2.2; 1.5–3.3). Conclusion Patients in all countries assigned high value to good communication. Availability was deemed important but came secondary to good communication. Implications Organisational framework for general practice must allow for acceptable communication quality as well as availability.Key points In order to identify relevant service areas for quality improvement in primary care, we aimed to increase knowledge of patient ranked importance of different dimensions of care. Nordic primary care patients valued good communication and involvement in decisions higher than accessibility to care. A singular focus on the access of care when developing services may not be in accordance with patient preferences.
topic general practice
qualicopc
delivery of health care
patient preference
nordic countries
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2021.1928837
work_keys_str_mv AT torunnbjerveeide goodcommunicationwasvaluedasmoreimportantthanaccessibilityaccordingto707nordicprimarycarepatientsareportfromthequalicopcstudy
AT jørundstraand goodcommunicationwasvaluedasmoreimportantthanaccessibilityaccordingto707nordicprimarycarepatientsareportfromthequalicopcstudy
AT anjamariabraend goodcommunicationwasvaluedasmoreimportantthanaccessibilityaccordingto707nordicprimarycarepatientsareportfromthequalicopcstudy
_version_ 1716844040953004032