Abstract Background: Frequent attendance is largely a temporary phenomenon, but only few previous studies have made a distinction between long-term frequent attenders (FAs) and short-term FAs. Aims: The aim of this study is to compare the characteristics of middle-aged long-term FAs and short-term FAs. Methods: Data from a large Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1966 studyʼs (NFBC1966) 46-year follow-up study (performed in 2012, N = 10 321) were used. The participants (n = 4390) had used public primary healthcare (PPHC) services at least once during 2013–2016 according to Finnish national register data on outpatient visits. A FA was considered a patient who had used PPHC services ≥8 times during 1 year. A long-term FA: a patient who was a FA...
Abstract Background Out-of-hours (OOH) services are often consulted for problems that are non-urgent...
Purpose: Due to population ageing, the need for long-term institutional care is increasing. We study...
Introduction - The small number of the population who make disproportionally greater use of health c...
Abstract Background: The characteristics of frequent attenders have been studied extensively; howev...
Contains fulltext : 167904.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)OBJECTIVES: Fre...
Objectives: Frequent attenders (FAs) suffer more and consult general practitioners (GPs) more often ...
Objective: To investigate risk factors for frequent attendance in primary care over time, contrastin...
Abstract Background Despite only constituting a small percentage of the population, frequent attende...
OBJECTIVES: To describe patterns of frequent attendance in Australian primary care, and identify the...
BACKGROUND: General Practitioners spend a disproportionate amount of time on frequent attenders. So ...
Abstract The aim of this cross-sectional controlled study was to determine frequent attenders' chro...
BACKGROUND: A detailed description of the characteristics of frequent attenders (FAs) at primary car...
Abstract The purpose of the study was to describe and explain the perceptions of long- and short-te...
Abstract Background The aim of the study was to compare occasional and persistent frequent attenders...
Introduction: The proportion of patients who are frequent attenders (FAs) varies from few percent to...
Abstract Background Out-of-hours (OOH) services are often consulted for problems that are non-urgent...
Purpose: Due to population ageing, the need for long-term institutional care is increasing. We study...
Introduction - The small number of the population who make disproportionally greater use of health c...
Abstract Background: The characteristics of frequent attenders have been studied extensively; howev...
Contains fulltext : 167904.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)OBJECTIVES: Fre...
Objectives: Frequent attenders (FAs) suffer more and consult general practitioners (GPs) more often ...
Objective: To investigate risk factors for frequent attendance in primary care over time, contrastin...
Abstract Background Despite only constituting a small percentage of the population, frequent attende...
OBJECTIVES: To describe patterns of frequent attendance in Australian primary care, and identify the...
BACKGROUND: General Practitioners spend a disproportionate amount of time on frequent attenders. So ...
Abstract The aim of this cross-sectional controlled study was to determine frequent attenders' chro...
BACKGROUND: A detailed description of the characteristics of frequent attenders (FAs) at primary car...
Abstract The purpose of the study was to describe and explain the perceptions of long- and short-te...
Abstract Background The aim of the study was to compare occasional and persistent frequent attenders...
Introduction: The proportion of patients who are frequent attenders (FAs) varies from few percent to...
Abstract Background Out-of-hours (OOH) services are often consulted for problems that are non-urgent...
Purpose: Due to population ageing, the need for long-term institutional care is increasing. We study...
Introduction - The small number of the population who make disproportionally greater use of health c...