TY - JOUR
T1 - Reorganization of the Danish out-of-hours primary care - a descriptive study
AU - Sovso, Morten Breinholt
AU - Thomsen, Janus Laust
AU - Frischknecht Christensen, Erika
AU - Iversen, Kasper Karmark
AU - Folke, Fredrik
AU - Mogensen, Christian Backer
AU - Lassen, Annmarie
AU - Sondergaard, Jens
AU - Christensen, Helle Collatz
AU - Elkjaer, Mette
AU - Heltberg, Andreas Sondergaard
AU - Vaeggemose, Ulla
AU - Mikkelsen, Soren
AU - Andersen, Lars Bredevang
AU - Gude, Martin Faurholdt
AU - Gehrt, Tine Bennedsen
AU - Zakariassen, Erik
AU - Huibers, Linda
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - BackgroundIncreasing demand for healthcare due to demographic changes and shortage of healthcare professionals challenges the provision of unplanned care. In Denmark, different organizational changes across all regions have been implemented to meet these challenges. This provides great potential for research on the effect of different organizational choices on the use and quality of healthcare. Thus, we aim to provide a comprehensive overview of the current organizational models for acute unplanned out-of-hours primary care (OOHPC) across the five Danish regions, incorporating key contextual factors to characterize these regional systems.MethodsNationwide cross-sectional survey study on OOHPC models in all Danish regions (North, Central, Southern, Capital, and Zealand). Survey questions covered a list of predefined topics created in the author group. One survey was completed per region.ResultsOOHPC models differ across regions and time of day. In the North, Central, and Southern regions from 4 PM-11 PM, general practitioner (GP) cooperatives deliver OOHPC (telephone triage, tele- and clinic consultations, and home visits). From 11 PM-8 AM, the regional emergency medical services provide OOHPC in the North (GPs/physicians, paramedics) and Central (physicians, nurses, paramedics) regions. In the Southern region, the administrative responsibility of the OOHPC lies with the emergency department, but GPs provide healthcare aided by paramedics. The Capital, Central (nights), and Zealand regions have nurses and physicians performing telephone triage. All regions provide clinic consultations with physicians. In the Capital region, these consultations are hospital-based. Currently, no OOHPC data is transferred to national registries in four regions during nighttime.ConclusionDanish OOHPC models differ substantially regarding the use of healthcare professionals for delivering acute unplanned care. All regions still provide gatekeeping, where OOHPC performs a primary evaluation before a possible hospital contact. Delivery of relevant data to registries has decreased substantially with the current models, potentially creating a barrier for nationwide research on OOHPC.
AB - BackgroundIncreasing demand for healthcare due to demographic changes and shortage of healthcare professionals challenges the provision of unplanned care. In Denmark, different organizational changes across all regions have been implemented to meet these challenges. This provides great potential for research on the effect of different organizational choices on the use and quality of healthcare. Thus, we aim to provide a comprehensive overview of the current organizational models for acute unplanned out-of-hours primary care (OOHPC) across the five Danish regions, incorporating key contextual factors to characterize these regional systems.MethodsNationwide cross-sectional survey study on OOHPC models in all Danish regions (North, Central, Southern, Capital, and Zealand). Survey questions covered a list of predefined topics created in the author group. One survey was completed per region.ResultsOOHPC models differ across regions and time of day. In the North, Central, and Southern regions from 4 PM-11 PM, general practitioner (GP) cooperatives deliver OOHPC (telephone triage, tele- and clinic consultations, and home visits). From 11 PM-8 AM, the regional emergency medical services provide OOHPC in the North (GPs/physicians, paramedics) and Central (physicians, nurses, paramedics) regions. In the Southern region, the administrative responsibility of the OOHPC lies with the emergency department, but GPs provide healthcare aided by paramedics. The Capital, Central (nights), and Zealand regions have nurses and physicians performing telephone triage. All regions provide clinic consultations with physicians. In the Capital region, these consultations are hospital-based. Currently, no OOHPC data is transferred to national registries in four regions during nighttime.ConclusionDanish OOHPC models differ substantially regarding the use of healthcare professionals for delivering acute unplanned care. All regions still provide gatekeeping, where OOHPC performs a primary evaluation before a possible hospital contact. Delivery of relevant data to registries has decreased substantially with the current models, potentially creating a barrier for nationwide research on OOHPC.
KW - Denmark
KW - Primary health care
KW - After hours care
KW - Emergency medical services
KW - Health services administration
U2 - 10.1080/02813432.2025.2490915
DO - 10.1080/02813432.2025.2490915
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 40254786
SN - 0281-3432
JO - Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care
JF - Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care
ER -