1. Why does continuity of care with family doctors matter?: Review and qualitative synthesis of patient and physician perspectives
- Author
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Sumana Christina Naidu, Dominik Alex Nowak, Ross E.G. Upshur, Kerry Kuluski, and Natasha Yasmin Sheikhan
- Subjects
Research ,MEDLINE ,Physicians, Family ,General Medicine ,PsycINFO ,Continuity of Patient Care ,Focus Groups ,Focus group ,United States ,Harm ,Nursing ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,Humans ,European union ,Psychology ,Family Practice ,Qualitative Research ,Meaning (linguistics) ,Qualitative research ,Primary research ,media_common - Abstract
Objective To summarize and synthesize qualitative studies that report patient and physician perspectives on continuity of care in family practice. Data sources MEDLINE (Ovid), EMBASE (Ovid), and PsycInfo (Ovid) were searched for qualitative primary research reporting perspectives of patients, physicians, or both, on continuity of care in family practice. Study selection English-language qualitative studies were selected (eg, interviews, focus groups, mixed methods) that were conducted in Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, the European Union, New Zealand, or Australia. Synthesis Themes were extracted, summarized, and synthesized. Six overarching themes emerged: continuity of care enables person-centred care; continuity of care increases quality of care; continuity of care leads to greater confidence in medical decision making; continuity of care comes with drawbacks; the absence of continuity of care may lead to medical and psychological harm; and continuity of care can foster greater joy and meaning in a physician’s work. Out of the 6 themes, patients and physicians shared the first 5. Conclusion To the authors’ knowledge, this is the first qualitative review reporting the unique perspectives of both patients and family physicians on continuity of care. The findings add nuanced insight to the importance of continuity of care in family practice.
- Published
- 2021