Patients as healthcare consumers in the public and private sectors: a qualitative study of acupuncture in the UK

被引:37
|
作者
Bishop, Felicity L. [1 ]
Barlow, Fiona [1 ,2 ]
Coghlan, Beverly [1 ,3 ]
Lee, Philippa [1 ]
Lewith, George T. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Southampton, Sch Med, Aldermoor Hlth Ctr, Southampton SO16 5ST, Hants, England
[2] Univ Oxford, Hlth Experiences Res Grp, Dept Primary Hlth Care, Oxford OX3 7LF, England
[3] Univ Surrey, Sch Psychol, Guildford GU2 7XH, Surrey, England
关键词
COMPLEMENTARY MEDICINE; UNITED-KINGDOM; SERVICE; INSURANCE; DEMAND; EXPERIENCES; CHOICE; ACCESS; ADULTS; STATES;
D O I
10.1186/1472-6963-11-129
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: The aim of this study was to compare patients' experiences of public and private sector healthcare, using acupuncture as an example. In the UK, acupuncture is popular with patients, is recommended in official guidelines for low back pain, and is available in both the private sector and the public sector (NHS). Consumerism was used as a theoretical framework to explore patients' experiences. Methods: Semi-structured face-to-face interviews were conducted in 2007-8 with a purposive sample of 27 patients who had recently used acupuncture for painful conditions in the private sector and/or in the NHS. Inductive thematic analysis was used to develop themes that summarised the bulk of the data and provided insights into consumerism in NHS-and private practice-based acupuncture. Results: Five main themes were identified: value for money and willingness to pay; free and fair access; individualised holistic care: feeling cared for; consequences of choice: empowerment and vulnerability; and "just added extras": physical environment. Patients who had received acupuncture in the private sector constructed detailed accounts of the benefits of private care. Patients who had not received acupuncture in the private sector expected minimal differences from NHS care, and those differences were seen as not integral to treatment. The private sector facilitated consumerist behaviour to a greater extent than did the NHS, but private consumers appeared to base their decisions on unreliable and incomplete information. Conclusions: Patients used and experienced acupuncture differently in the NHS compared to the private sector. Eight different faces of consumerist behaviour were identified, but six were dominant: consumer as chooser, consumer as pragmatist, consumer as patient, consumer as earnest explorer, consumer as victim, and consumer as citizen. The decision to use acupuncture in either the private sector or the NHS was rarely well-informed: NHS and private patients both had misconceptions about acupuncture in the other sector. Future research should evaluate whether the differences we identified in patients' experiences across private and public healthcare are common, whether they translate into significant differences in clinical outcomes, and whether similar faces of consumerism characterise patients' experiences of other interventions in the private and public sectors.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Primary healthcare seeking behaviour of low-income patients across the public and private health sectors in South Africa
    Govender, Kerensa
    Girdwood, Sarah
    Letswalo, Daniel
    Long, Lawrence
    Meyer-Rath, G.
    Miot, J.
    BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, 2021, 21 (01)
  • [22] Qualitative study of patients' choice between public and private hospital emergency departments
    He, Jun
    Toloo, Ghasem-Sam
    Hou, Xiang-Yu
    Fitzgerald, Gerry
    EMERGENCY MEDICINE AUSTRALASIA, 2016, 28 (02) : 159 - 163
  • [23] DEVELOPMENT AND IMPLEMENTATION OF STRATEGIES TO REDUCE RED CELL WASTAGE ACROSS PUBLIC AND PRIVATE HEALTHCARE SECTORS
    Simon, G., I
    VOX SANGUINIS, 2012, 103 : 73 - 73
  • [24] Perceptions of and support for national health insurance in South Africa's public and private healthcare sectors
    Booysen, Frederik
    Hongoro, Charles
    PAN AFRICAN MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2018, 30
  • [25] Inter-organizational interaction in public and private sectors - a comparative study
    Melin, Ulf
    Axelsson, Karin
    TRANSFORMING GOVERNMENT- PEOPLE PROCESS AND POLICY, 2013, 7 (04) : 431 - 452
  • [26] Individual and Organisational Facets of Change in the Public and Private Sectors: A Comparative Study
    Devos, Geert
    Bouckenooghe, Dave
    ASIA PACIFIC JOURNAL OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION, 2006, 28 (02) : 201 - 229
  • [27] Value for money in UK healthcare public-private partnerships: A fragility perspective
    Santandrea, Martina
    Bailey, Stephen
    Giorgino, Marco
    PUBLIC POLICY AND ADMINISTRATION, 2016, 31 (03) : 260 - 279
  • [28] Public expenditure and private investment: A study of the UK and the USA
    Monadjemi, MS
    APPLIED ECONOMICS LETTERS, 1996, 3 (10): : 641 - 644
  • [29] Job demands, job resources, and health outcomes among nursing professionals in private and public healthcare sectors in Sweden – a prospective study
    Dip Raj Thapa
    Johanna Stengård
    Anette Ekström-Bergström
    Kristina Areskoug Josefsson
    Alexandra Krettek
    Anna Nyberg
    BMC Nursing, 21
  • [30] Job demands, job resources, and health outcomes among nursing professionals in private and public healthcare sectors in Sweden - a prospective study
    Thapa, Dip Raj
    Stengard, Johanna
    Ekstrom-Bergstrom, Anette
    Josefsson, Kristina Areskoug
    Krettek, Alexandra
    Nyberg, Anna
    BMC NURSING, 2022, 21 (01)