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Maintaining patient access to GUM clinics: is it compatible with appointments?
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-07, 13:58 authored by Jackie Cassell, M G Brook, C H Mercer, S Murphy, A M JohnsonOBJECTIVES: To determine whether a planned change from a walk-in service to a system in which 35% of appointments were prebooked and 65% obtained on the day, preserved access to the service for patients with, or at risk of, STIs. To describe patients' attitudes and behaviours in relation to accessing the clinic, and relate these to disease status and other epidemiological factors. To evaluate the effect of the change on clinical outcomes. To develop a tool for evaluating access to services. METHOD: A natural experiment was studied, in which a cohort of patients attending just before the change in appointments policy (phase 1) was compared with a cohort following the change (phase 2). A questionnaire was administered to all new patients, and linked to disaggregated epidemiological and demographic data and case notes. RESULTS: The age, ethnic, symptom status, and disease mix of the clinic did not change significantly, and more patients were seen in phase 2. Time from telephoning to being seen did not change. Under 25s and Afro-Caribbeans used prebooked appointments less than others. Partner notification improved and HIV testing rates increased, while staff preferred the new system. CONCLUSION: This specific appointment system in a GUM clinic preserved access for high risk groups. However, this may not generalise to systems with a higher proportion of prebooked appointments.
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
Sexually Transmitted InfectionsISSN
1368-4973Publisher
BMJ Publishing GroupExternal DOI
Issue
1Volume
79Page range
11-5Department affiliated with
- BSMS Publications
Notes
Journal ArticleFull text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes