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BackgroundPatient non-attendance remains a major challenge for health services. Few studies have examined how health service providers think about, potentially address, and prioritise non-attendance within the scope of their practice. This study aimed to (1) explore healthcare professionals’ perspectives, beliefs, and opinions about the impact of patient non-attendance within a publicly-funded outpatient physiotherapy clinic context; (2) explore perceived barriers and facilitators associated with the implementation of non-attendance mitigation strategies; and (3) identify health service staff generated solutions to address perceived barriers and enhance facilitators.MethodsA focus group discussion and semi-structured interviews were conducted between June 2023 to January 2024 with 27 physiotherapy department clinic outpatient staff involved in operationalising clinic referral processing, appointment scheduling, or providing care to patients. Data was analysed using a hybrid inductive/deductive framework analysis approach.ResultsParticipants indicated that non-attendance had predominantly negative implications for the health service, healthcare provider, and patient. The interconnected issue of non-attendance encompassed multiple areas and were broadly categorised into five inductively identified themes: impact of non-attendance, perceptions of value, material deprivation, service delivery and built environment, and professional role and identity. Non-attendance mitigation strategies generated by participants were deductively mapped to the theoretical domains framework (TDF) to explore behavioural determinants that may influence successful implementation. This included knowledge, reinforcement, goals, optimism, memory, attention and decision-making, environmental resources and context, and emotions.ConclusionsStaff identified multiple strategies for reducing non-attendance; implementing many of these strategies would require additional resourcing. Research determining the effectiveness of such strategies both in the short-term and long-term following implementation into practice remains a priority for future investigation.
BackgroundPatient non-attendance remains a major challenge for health services. Few studies have examined how health service providers think about, potentially address, and prioritise non-attendance within the scope of their practice. This study aimed to (1) explore healthcare professionals’ perspectives, beliefs, and opinions about the impact of patient non-attendance within a publicly-funded outpatient physiotherapy clinic context; (2) explore perceived barriers and facilitators associated with the implementation of non-attendance mitigation strategies; and (3) identify health service staff generated solutions to address perceived barriers and enhance facilitators.MethodsA focus group discussion and semi-structured interviews were conducted between June 2023 to January 2024 with 27 physiotherapy department clinic outpatient staff involved in operationalising clinic referral processing, appointment scheduling, or providing care to patients. Data was analysed using a hybrid inductive/deductive framework analysis approach.ResultsParticipants indicated that non-attendance had predominantly negative implications for the health service, healthcare provider, and patient. The interconnected issue of non-attendance encompassed multiple areas and were broadly categorised into five inductively identified themes: impact of non-attendance, perceptions of value, material deprivation, service delivery and built environment, and professional role and identity. Non-attendance mitigation strategies generated by participants were deductively mapped to the theoretical domains framework (TDF) to explore behavioural determinants that may influence successful implementation. This included knowledge, reinforcement, goals, optimism, memory, attention and decision-making, environmental resources and context, and emotions.ConclusionsStaff identified multiple strategies for reducing non-attendance; implementing many of these strategies would require additional resourcing. Research determining the effectiveness of such strategies both in the short-term and long-term following implementation into practice remains a priority for future investigation.
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