Background: In Germany, patients under the age of 18 receive medical care from pediatricians. In sparsely populated regions, general practitioners often have to do the job of pediatricians and offer medical care to children, which in most cases is adequate. However, it does not meet the goal of demand planning namely, every patient should have equal access to care regardless of their place of residence. One option to help achieve this is the implementation of consultation hours with pediatricians in general practitioners' practices (tandem practices). The aim of this study was to investigate the feasibility and acceptance of this cooperation and whether this improved access to pediatric care.
Methods: First, general practitioners willing to participate were identified, where the nearest pediatrician's practice was more than 20 kilometers away. The second step was to find suitable pediatricians willing to offer regular weekly pediatric consultations in the practice of a general practitioner. For the evaluation, various data collection methods were used: one-off parent questionnaires at the time of study inclusion, questionnaires filled out by the pediatricians for each consultation, and data from the practice information systems in the participating practices. The distance between the patients' place of residence and the next regular outpatient pediatrician's practice were calculated and compared to the distance to a tandem practice.
Results: In April 2019, in two practices tandem consultation hours were implemented. During 12 months, 192 children and adolescents (50.2% female) were included. They attended the consultation hours a total of 387 times. Of 482 reasons given in the doctor's questionnaire, 36.9% were vaccinations (n=178), 14.9% were preventive examinations (n=72), the most frequently coded ICD-10 diagnostic groups were diseases of the respiratory system (J00-J99: 8.5%, n=41) and mental/behavioral disorders (F00-F99: 7.7%, n=37). Before the project, the patients had an average of 20.2 kilometers (min 0.3; max 34.8) to the next regular outpatient pediatrician's practice; within the project, the distance decreased to 5.1 kilometers (min 0.1; max 26.7).
Conclusion: All doctors involved wanted to continue the tandem consultations after the end of the test phase. The project results showed the feasibility and a high level of acceptance of tandem practices, both for the doctors involved and for the patients and their parents.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11248073 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/a-1967-9912 | DOI Listing |
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