Background: Whilst many health systems offer a range of urgent and emergency care services to deal with the need for unscheduled care, these can be problematic to navigate. Objective: To explore how lay people make sense of urgent care provision and processes. Design: Qualitative study, incorporating citizen panels and longitudinal semi‐structured qualitative interviews. Setting and Participants: Two citizens’ panels, comprising purposively selected public populations—a group of regular users and a group of potentially marginalized users of urgent and emergency care. Semi‐structured interviews were conducted with 100 people, purposively sampled to include those over 75, aged 18‐26 years, and from East/Central Europe. A sub‐sample of 41 peop...
Classically, the "medical emergency" is defined as an injury or illness that poses an immediate thre...
AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: To investigate factors influencing patients' self-management of urgent diabete...
Background: Older people are the largest patient user-group of NHS care and yet we know little of ...
Background: whilst many health systems offer a range of urgent and emergency care services to deal w...
Background Policy has been focused on reducing unnecessary emergency department attendances by provi...
Background: Theoretical models have sought to comprehend and conceptualise how people seek help...
Background: Policies aimed at diverting care from EDs to alternative services have not been successf...
Objective: We aimed to explore how patients with long-term conditions choose between available healt...
Abstract Background Studies have identified young adults as more likely to use emergency departments...
OBJECTIVE: We aimed to explore how patients with long-term conditions choose between available healt...
Introduction: Research has described emergency department (ED) use patterns in detail. However, evid...
Introduction: Research has described emergency department (ED) use patterns in detail. However, evi...
AbstractObjectiveWe aimed to explore how patients with long-term conditions choose between available...
Background: Frequent users of the emergency room are described as medically- and socially-complex an...
The problem: Response times have been used as a key quality indicator for measuring the quality of a...
Classically, the "medical emergency" is defined as an injury or illness that poses an immediate thre...
AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: To investigate factors influencing patients' self-management of urgent diabete...
Background: Older people are the largest patient user-group of NHS care and yet we know little of ...
Background: whilst many health systems offer a range of urgent and emergency care services to deal w...
Background Policy has been focused on reducing unnecessary emergency department attendances by provi...
Background: Theoretical models have sought to comprehend and conceptualise how people seek help...
Background: Policies aimed at diverting care from EDs to alternative services have not been successf...
Objective: We aimed to explore how patients with long-term conditions choose between available healt...
Abstract Background Studies have identified young adults as more likely to use emergency departments...
OBJECTIVE: We aimed to explore how patients with long-term conditions choose between available healt...
Introduction: Research has described emergency department (ED) use patterns in detail. However, evid...
Introduction: Research has described emergency department (ED) use patterns in detail. However, evi...
AbstractObjectiveWe aimed to explore how patients with long-term conditions choose between available...
Background: Frequent users of the emergency room are described as medically- and socially-complex an...
The problem: Response times have been used as a key quality indicator for measuring the quality of a...
Classically, the "medical emergency" is defined as an injury or illness that poses an immediate thre...
AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: To investigate factors influencing patients' self-management of urgent diabete...
Background: Older people are the largest patient user-group of NHS care and yet we know little of ...