Stuff you think you can handle as a parent and stuff you can’t’. Understanding parental health‐seeking behaviour when accessing unscheduled care: A qualitative study

Abstract Background Unscheduled health care constitutes a significant proportion of health‐care utilization. Parental decision making when accessing unscheduled care for their children is multifaceted and must be better understood to inform policy and practice. Design Nineteen semi‐structured interv...

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Main Authors: Ciara Conlon, Emma Nicholson, Aoife De Brún, Therese McDonnell, Eilish McAuliffe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-10-01
Series:Health Expectations
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/hex.13305
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spelling doaj-8d7717a5bad446d38edd0574ded5df2e2021-09-30T16:23:04ZengWileyHealth Expectations1369-65131369-76252021-10-012451649165910.1111/hex.13305Stuff you think you can handle as a parent and stuff you can’t’. Understanding parental health‐seeking behaviour when accessing unscheduled care: A qualitative studyCiara Conlon0Emma Nicholson1Aoife De Brún2Therese McDonnell3Eilish McAuliffe4UCD Centre for Interdisciplinary Research Education and Innovation in Health Systems UCD School of Nursing Midwifery & Health Systems University College Dublin Dublin IrelandUCD Centre for Interdisciplinary Research Education and Innovation in Health Systems UCD School of Nursing Midwifery & Health Systems University College Dublin Dublin IrelandUCD Centre for Interdisciplinary Research Education and Innovation in Health Systems UCD School of Nursing Midwifery & Health Systems University College Dublin Dublin IrelandUCD Centre for Interdisciplinary Research Education and Innovation in Health Systems UCD School of Nursing Midwifery & Health Systems University College Dublin Dublin IrelandUCD Centre for Interdisciplinary Research Education and Innovation in Health Systems UCD School of Nursing Midwifery & Health Systems University College Dublin Dublin IrelandAbstract Background Unscheduled health care constitutes a significant proportion of health‐care utilization. Parental decision making when accessing unscheduled care for their children is multifaceted and must be better understood to inform policy and practice. Design Nineteen semi‐structured interviews and one focus group (n = 4) with parents of children younger than twelve in Ireland were conducted. Participants had accessed unscheduled care for their children in the past. Data were thematically analysed. Results Parents accessed unscheduled care for their children after reaching capacity to manage the child's health themselves. This was informed by factors such as parental experience, perceived urgency and need for reassurance. Parents considered the necessity to access care and situated their health‐seeking behaviour within a framework of ‘appropriateness’. Where parents sought unscheduled care was largely determined by timely access, and inability to secure a general practitioner (GP) appointment often led parents to access other services. Parents expressed a need for more support in navigating unscheduled care options. Conclusions Better resources to educate and support parents are required, and structural issues, such as accessibility to GPs, need to be addressed to enable parents to better navigate the unscheduled health system and manage their children's health. The discourse around ‘appropriate’ and ‘inappropriate’ access to health care has permeated parental decision making when accessing unscheduled health care for their children. What constitutes appropriate access should be examined, and a shift away from this framing of health‐seeking behaviour may be warranted. Patient or Public Contribution There was no explicit patient or public involvement. All authors hold experience as users of the health system.https://doi.org/10.1111/hex.13305emergency caregeneral practitionerhealth‐seeking behaviourpaediatric health careparental decision makingunscheduled health care
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ciara Conlon
Emma Nicholson
Aoife De Brún
Therese McDonnell
Eilish McAuliffe
spellingShingle Ciara Conlon
Emma Nicholson
Aoife De Brún
Therese McDonnell
Eilish McAuliffe
Stuff you think you can handle as a parent and stuff you can’t’. Understanding parental health‐seeking behaviour when accessing unscheduled care: A qualitative study
Health Expectations
emergency care
general practitioner
health‐seeking behaviour
paediatric health care
parental decision making
unscheduled health care
author_facet Ciara Conlon
Emma Nicholson
Aoife De Brún
Therese McDonnell
Eilish McAuliffe
author_sort Ciara Conlon
title Stuff you think you can handle as a parent and stuff you can’t’. Understanding parental health‐seeking behaviour when accessing unscheduled care: A qualitative study
title_short Stuff you think you can handle as a parent and stuff you can’t’. Understanding parental health‐seeking behaviour when accessing unscheduled care: A qualitative study
title_full Stuff you think you can handle as a parent and stuff you can’t’. Understanding parental health‐seeking behaviour when accessing unscheduled care: A qualitative study
title_fullStr Stuff you think you can handle as a parent and stuff you can’t’. Understanding parental health‐seeking behaviour when accessing unscheduled care: A qualitative study
title_full_unstemmed Stuff you think you can handle as a parent and stuff you can’t’. Understanding parental health‐seeking behaviour when accessing unscheduled care: A qualitative study
title_sort stuff you think you can handle as a parent and stuff you can’t’. understanding parental health‐seeking behaviour when accessing unscheduled care: a qualitative study
publisher Wiley
series Health Expectations
issn 1369-6513
1369-7625
publishDate 2021-10-01
description Abstract Background Unscheduled health care constitutes a significant proportion of health‐care utilization. Parental decision making when accessing unscheduled care for their children is multifaceted and must be better understood to inform policy and practice. Design Nineteen semi‐structured interviews and one focus group (n = 4) with parents of children younger than twelve in Ireland were conducted. Participants had accessed unscheduled care for their children in the past. Data were thematically analysed. Results Parents accessed unscheduled care for their children after reaching capacity to manage the child's health themselves. This was informed by factors such as parental experience, perceived urgency and need for reassurance. Parents considered the necessity to access care and situated their health‐seeking behaviour within a framework of ‘appropriateness’. Where parents sought unscheduled care was largely determined by timely access, and inability to secure a general practitioner (GP) appointment often led parents to access other services. Parents expressed a need for more support in navigating unscheduled care options. Conclusions Better resources to educate and support parents are required, and structural issues, such as accessibility to GPs, need to be addressed to enable parents to better navigate the unscheduled health system and manage their children's health. The discourse around ‘appropriate’ and ‘inappropriate’ access to health care has permeated parental decision making when accessing unscheduled health care for their children. What constitutes appropriate access should be examined, and a shift away from this framing of health‐seeking behaviour may be warranted. Patient or Public Contribution There was no explicit patient or public involvement. All authors hold experience as users of the health system.
topic emergency care
general practitioner
health‐seeking behaviour
paediatric health care
parental decision making
unscheduled health care
url https://doi.org/10.1111/hex.13305
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