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Rural Remote Health ; 8(4): 1024, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18999904

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: As the rural general practice workforce in New Zealand changes, after hours services are under pressure to change. This is an international problem. This article reports on an initiative in a rural New Zealand community to meet the need for after hours care. First contact for patients is with a community nursing team operating from the local health centre, complemented by on-call advice from GPs and GP clinics twice daily at weekends. OBJECTIVE: To report on the demand for after hours services generated by a geographically defined community in New Zealand. DESIGN: A prospective cross-sectional survey of after hours utilization over a one month period using questionnaires was completed by the full range of healthcare professionals providing care. SETTING: A single geographically defined rural community of 9200 people in the North Island of New Zealand. PARTICIPANTS: Rural GPs, community nurses and the ambulance service. RESULTS: Only 90/204 patient contacts were seen by the GPs with the remainder being managed by the nurses or ambulance staff. Nurses referred more patients to the base hospital but overall 87% of contacts handled by the doctors and nurses were managed locally. Estimated out of hours contact rate was 320/1000 persons/year (including telephone consultations). For direct face-to-face contact the rate was 245/1000 per year: for Maori the rate was 425/1000 per year while for non-Maori the rate was 151/1000 per year. Ambulance services provided an urgent call service at the rate of 29/1000 persons per year. CONCLUSION: A collaborative service providing after hours care to a rural community is described and utilization rates assessed. The model of first on-call nurse with GP back up provides a sustainable service and reduces the burden on rural doctors without reducing patient access.


Subject(s)
After-Hours Care/organization & administration , Community-Institutional Relations , Family Practice/organization & administration , Rural Health Services/statistics & numerical data , Rural Population/statistics & numerical data , Adult , Aged , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , New Zealand/epidemiology , Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care , Practice Patterns, Physicians'/organization & administration , Prospective Studies
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