Contact to the out-of-hours service among Danish parents of small children – a qualitative interview study

Objective: In Denmark, parents with small children have the highest contact frequency to out-of-hours (OOH) service, but reasons for OOH care use are sparsely investigated. The aim was to explore parental contact pattern to OOH services and to explore parents’ experiences with managing their childre...

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Main Authors: Marie Lass, Camilla Rahr Tatari, Camilla Hoffmann Merrild, Linda Huibers, Helle Terkildsen Maindal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-04-01
Series:Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2018.1459431
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spelling doaj-7c03115f15bd41b99cba94ed5f0ddf762020-11-24T22:01:23ZengTaylor & Francis GroupScandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care0281-34321502-77242018-04-0136221622310.1080/02813432.2018.14594311459431Contact to the out-of-hours service among Danish parents of small children – a qualitative interview studyMarie Lass0Camilla Rahr Tatari1Camilla Hoffmann Merrild2Linda Huibers3Helle Terkildsen Maindal4Aarhus UniversityAarhus UniversityAarhus UniversityAarhus UniversityAarhus UniversityObjective: In Denmark, parents with small children have the highest contact frequency to out-of-hours (OOH) service, but reasons for OOH care use are sparsely investigated. The aim was to explore parental contact pattern to OOH services and to explore parents’ experiences with managing their children’s acute health problems. Design: A qualitative study was undertaken drawing on a phenomenological approach. We used semi-structured interviews, followed by an inductive content analysis. Nine parents with children below four years of age were recruited from a child day care centre in Aarhus, Denmark for interviews. Results: Navigation, information, parental worry and parental development appeared to have an impact on OOH services use. The parents found it easy to navigate in the health care system, but they often used the OOH service instead of their own general practitioner (GP) due to more compatible opening hours and insecurity about the urgency of symptoms. When worried about the severity, the parents sought information from e.g. the internet or the health care professionals. The first child caused more worries and insecurity due to less experience with childhood diseases and the contact frequency seemed to decrease with parental development. Conclusion: Parents’ use of the OOH service is affected by their health literacy levels, e.g. level of information, how easy they find access to their GP, how trustworthy and authorized health information is, as well as how much they worry and their parental experience. These findings must be considered when planning effective health services for young families.Key points The main findings are that the parents in our study found it easy to navigate in the healthcare system, but they used the OOH service instead of their own general practitioner, when this suited their needs. The parents sought information from e.g. the internet or the health care professionals when they were worried about the severity of their children’s diseases. They sometimes navigated strategically in the healthcare system by e.g. using the OOH service for reassurance and when it was most convenient according to opening hours. The first child seemed to cause more worries and insecurity due to limited experience with childhood diseases, and parental development seems to decrease contact frequency. Overall, this study contributes with valuable insights into the understanding of parents’ help seeking behaviour. There seems to be a potential for supporting especially first-time parents in their use of the out of hours services.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2018.1459431After hours careprimary health carehealth literacypaediatricsparentsmedical necessityhelp-seeking
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marie Lass
Camilla Rahr Tatari
Camilla Hoffmann Merrild
Linda Huibers
Helle Terkildsen Maindal
spellingShingle Marie Lass
Camilla Rahr Tatari
Camilla Hoffmann Merrild
Linda Huibers
Helle Terkildsen Maindal
Contact to the out-of-hours service among Danish parents of small children – a qualitative interview study
Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care
After hours care
primary health care
health literacy
paediatrics
parents
medical necessity
help-seeking
author_facet Marie Lass
Camilla Rahr Tatari
Camilla Hoffmann Merrild
Linda Huibers
Helle Terkildsen Maindal
author_sort Marie Lass
title Contact to the out-of-hours service among Danish parents of small children – a qualitative interview study
title_short Contact to the out-of-hours service among Danish parents of small children – a qualitative interview study
title_full Contact to the out-of-hours service among Danish parents of small children – a qualitative interview study
title_fullStr Contact to the out-of-hours service among Danish parents of small children – a qualitative interview study
title_full_unstemmed Contact to the out-of-hours service among Danish parents of small children – a qualitative interview study
title_sort contact to the out-of-hours service among danish parents of small children – a qualitative interview study
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care
issn 0281-3432
1502-7724
publishDate 2018-04-01
description Objective: In Denmark, parents with small children have the highest contact frequency to out-of-hours (OOH) service, but reasons for OOH care use are sparsely investigated. The aim was to explore parental contact pattern to OOH services and to explore parents’ experiences with managing their children’s acute health problems. Design: A qualitative study was undertaken drawing on a phenomenological approach. We used semi-structured interviews, followed by an inductive content analysis. Nine parents with children below four years of age were recruited from a child day care centre in Aarhus, Denmark for interviews. Results: Navigation, information, parental worry and parental development appeared to have an impact on OOH services use. The parents found it easy to navigate in the health care system, but they often used the OOH service instead of their own general practitioner (GP) due to more compatible opening hours and insecurity about the urgency of symptoms. When worried about the severity, the parents sought information from e.g. the internet or the health care professionals. The first child caused more worries and insecurity due to less experience with childhood diseases and the contact frequency seemed to decrease with parental development. Conclusion: Parents’ use of the OOH service is affected by their health literacy levels, e.g. level of information, how easy they find access to their GP, how trustworthy and authorized health information is, as well as how much they worry and their parental experience. These findings must be considered when planning effective health services for young families.Key points The main findings are that the parents in our study found it easy to navigate in the healthcare system, but they used the OOH service instead of their own general practitioner, when this suited their needs. The parents sought information from e.g. the internet or the health care professionals when they were worried about the severity of their children’s diseases. They sometimes navigated strategically in the healthcare system by e.g. using the OOH service for reassurance and when it was most convenient according to opening hours. The first child seemed to cause more worries and insecurity due to limited experience with childhood diseases, and parental development seems to decrease contact frequency. Overall, this study contributes with valuable insights into the understanding of parents’ help seeking behaviour. There seems to be a potential for supporting especially first-time parents in their use of the out of hours services.
topic After hours care
primary health care
health literacy
paediatrics
parents
medical necessity
help-seeking
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2018.1459431
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