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May, 2013
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After-Hours Care and its Coordination with Primary Care in the U.S.

Abstract

BACKGROUND
Despite expectations that medical homes provide “24 × 7 coverage” there is little to guide primary care practices in developing sustainable models for accessible and coordinated after–hours care.

OBJECTIVE
To identify and describe models of after-hours care in the U.S. that are delivered in primary care sites or coordinated with a patient’s usual primary care provider.

DESIGN
Qualitative analysis of data from in-depth telephone interviews.

SETTING
Primary care practices in 16 states and the organizations they partner with to provide after-hours coverage.

PARTICIPANTS Forty-four primary care physicians, practice managers, nurses and health plan representatives from 28 organizations.

APPROACH
Analyses examined after-hours care models, facilitators, barriers and lessons learned.

RESULTS
Based on 28 organizations interviewed, five broad models of after-hours care were identified, ranging in the extent to which they provide continuity and patient access. Key themes included: 1) The feasibility of a model varies for many reasons, including patient preferences and needs, the local health care market supply, and financial compensation; 2) A shared electronic health record and systematic notification procedures were extremely helpful in maintaining information continuity between providers; and 3) after-hours care is best implemented as part of a larger practice approach to access and continuity.

CONCLUSION
After-hours care coordinated with a patient’s usual primary care provider is facilitated by consideration of patient demand, provider capacity, a shared electronic health record, systematic notification procedures and a broader practice approach to improving primary care access and continuity. Payer support is important to increasing patients’ access to after-hours care.

O’Malley A, Samuel D, Bond A, Carrier E. After-Hours Care and its Coordination with Primary Care in the U.S. J Gen Intern Med [Internet]. 2012 Jun 1;Online first. Available from: http://www.springerlink.com/content/h72vm5675786182p/abstract/

12 June 2012

Bibliographic Data

Title:

After-Hours Care and its Coordination with Primary Care in the U.S.

Author(s):

O’Malley, Ann; Samuel, Divya; Bond, Amelia; Carrier, Emily

Journal

Journal of General Internal Medicine, Online first
(2012-06-01)

URL:

Abstract

DOI:

10.1007/s11606-012-2087-4

Keyword(s):

Electronic Health Records, Primary Care, United States

Citation:
O’Malley A, Samuel D, Bond A, Carrier E. After-Hours Care and its Coordination with Primary Care in the U.S. J Gen Intern Med [Internet]. 2012 Jun 1;Online first. Available from: http://www.springerlink.com/content/h72vm5675786182p/abstract/

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Emily Carrier

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