Home visits in rural general practice : what does the future hold?

Article indépendant

MURPHY, Rachel | MCERLEAN, Sarah | MAGUIRE, Sarah E. | STEWART, Paul

Introduction: Declining house-call rates have been documented worldwide; however, up-to-date data on current rates are lacking, particularly in rural settings. Systematic reviews in this area are inconsistent; however, other work, principally qualitative research, demonstrates benefits for both doctors and patients. The aim of this study was to establish the current rate of, and reasons for, home visits in a rural general practice setting. Methods: This was a descriptive observational study in the north-west of Ireland. Fourteen general practice training practices with approximately 30 000 patients were recruited. Data on house calls done in each practice were collected during May and June 2019. Anonymised data were analysed using Microsoft Excel and GraphPad. Results: Data were received on 547 house calls. The rate of house calls done within normal working hours (443) was calculated at 87 house calls/1000 patients/year (raw proportion 1.44%). Using the N-1 2 test, this rate was compared to that calculated in a similar 2009 study (143/1000/year; raw proportion 2.43%), giving a difference of 0.991% (95% confidence interval 0.759–1.22%; p<0.001). This is a statistically significant reduction of 40% over 10 years. Most (86.2%) house calls were to patients aged over 65 years. House calls were commonly done for respiratory infection (17%), other infections (12%), palliative care (11%) and pain (11%). Most patients were managed solely within the community (88.3%), with 45.8% of those requiring a prescription, and only 11.7% of house calls being referred to hospital. Conclusion: There are documented benefits to home visits and yet the rate of house calls has been declining worldwide. With no recent literature on the rate or reasons for home visits in rural general practice, this research has demonstrated that the house call rate in the north-west of Ireland is falling, mirroring the decline seen in other parts of Europe, Australia and the USA. These house calls are mainly for elderly patients to address infection or palliative care, and the majority can be managed successfully by general practitioners in the community. With an ageing population with increasing multi-morbidity, planning for care delivery to these patients is important for clinicians going forward. We now need to decide if house calls are a service worth saving.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35473306/

Voir la revue «Rural and remote health, 22»

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