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Emergency Departments as Care Providers for Patients with Cardiac Ambulatory Care Sensitive and Mental Health Conditions: Qualitative Interview and Focus Group Study with Patients and Physicians

Mental health conditions are frequent among patients with somatic illnesses, such as cardiac diseases. They often remain undiagnosed and are related to increased utilization of outpatient services, including emergency department care. The objective of this qualitative study was to investigate the si...

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Autores principales: Schmiedhofer, Martina, Slagman, Anna, Kuhlmann, Stella Linea, Figura, Andrea, Oslislo, Sarah, Schneider, Anna, Schenk, Liane, Rose, Matthias, Möckel, Martin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9141444/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35627633
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19106098
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author Schmiedhofer, Martina
Slagman, Anna
Kuhlmann, Stella Linea
Figura, Andrea
Oslislo, Sarah
Schneider, Anna
Schenk, Liane
Rose, Matthias
Möckel, Martin
author_facet Schmiedhofer, Martina
Slagman, Anna
Kuhlmann, Stella Linea
Figura, Andrea
Oslislo, Sarah
Schneider, Anna
Schenk, Liane
Rose, Matthias
Möckel, Martin
author_sort Schmiedhofer, Martina
collection PubMed
description Mental health conditions are frequent among patients with somatic illnesses, such as cardiac diseases. They often remain undiagnosed and are related to increased utilization of outpatient services, including emergency department care. The objective of this qualitative study was to investigate the significance of the emergency department in the patients’ course of treatment and from the physicians’ perspective. An improved understanding of the subjective needs of this specific patient group should provide hints for targeted treatment. This study is part of the prospective EMASPOT study, which determined the prevalence of mental health conditions in emergency department patients with cardiac ambulatory care sensitive conditions. The study on hand is the qualitative part, in which 20 semi-structured interviews with patients and a focus group with six ED physicians were conducted. Data material was analyzed using the qualitative content analysis technique, a research method for systematically identifying themes or patterns. For interpretation, we used the “typical case approach”. We identified five “typical patient cases” that differ in their cardiac and mental health burden of disease, frequency and significance of emergency department and outpatient care visits: (1) frequent emergency department users with cardiac diseases and mental health conditions, (2) frequent emergency department users without cardiac diseases but with mental health conditions, (3) needs-based emergency department users with cardiac diseases; (4) targeted emergency department users as an alternative to specialist care and (5) patients surprised by initial diagnose of cardiac disease in the emergency department. While patients often perceived the emergency department visit itself as a therapeutic benefit, emergency department physicians emphasized that frequent examinations of somatic complaints can worsen mental health conditions. To improve care, they proposed close cooperation with the patients’ primary care providers, access to patients’ medical data and early identification of mental health conditions after cardiac diagnoses, e.g., by an examination tool.
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spelling pubmed-91414442022-05-28 Emergency Departments as Care Providers for Patients with Cardiac Ambulatory Care Sensitive and Mental Health Conditions: Qualitative Interview and Focus Group Study with Patients and Physicians Schmiedhofer, Martina Slagman, Anna Kuhlmann, Stella Linea Figura, Andrea Oslislo, Sarah Schneider, Anna Schenk, Liane Rose, Matthias Möckel, Martin Int J Environ Res Public Health Article Mental health conditions are frequent among patients with somatic illnesses, such as cardiac diseases. They often remain undiagnosed and are related to increased utilization of outpatient services, including emergency department care. The objective of this qualitative study was to investigate the significance of the emergency department in the patients’ course of treatment and from the physicians’ perspective. An improved understanding of the subjective needs of this specific patient group should provide hints for targeted treatment. This study is part of the prospective EMASPOT study, which determined the prevalence of mental health conditions in emergency department patients with cardiac ambulatory care sensitive conditions. The study on hand is the qualitative part, in which 20 semi-structured interviews with patients and a focus group with six ED physicians were conducted. Data material was analyzed using the qualitative content analysis technique, a research method for systematically identifying themes or patterns. For interpretation, we used the “typical case approach”. We identified five “typical patient cases” that differ in their cardiac and mental health burden of disease, frequency and significance of emergency department and outpatient care visits: (1) frequent emergency department users with cardiac diseases and mental health conditions, (2) frequent emergency department users without cardiac diseases but with mental health conditions, (3) needs-based emergency department users with cardiac diseases; (4) targeted emergency department users as an alternative to specialist care and (5) patients surprised by initial diagnose of cardiac disease in the emergency department. While patients often perceived the emergency department visit itself as a therapeutic benefit, emergency department physicians emphasized that frequent examinations of somatic complaints can worsen mental health conditions. To improve care, they proposed close cooperation with the patients’ primary care providers, access to patients’ medical data and early identification of mental health conditions after cardiac diagnoses, e.g., by an examination tool. MDPI 2022-05-17 /pmc/articles/PMC9141444/ /pubmed/35627633 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19106098 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Schmiedhofer, Martina
Slagman, Anna
Kuhlmann, Stella Linea
Figura, Andrea
Oslislo, Sarah
Schneider, Anna
Schenk, Liane
Rose, Matthias
Möckel, Martin
Emergency Departments as Care Providers for Patients with Cardiac Ambulatory Care Sensitive and Mental Health Conditions: Qualitative Interview and Focus Group Study with Patients and Physicians
title Emergency Departments as Care Providers for Patients with Cardiac Ambulatory Care Sensitive and Mental Health Conditions: Qualitative Interview and Focus Group Study with Patients and Physicians
title_full Emergency Departments as Care Providers for Patients with Cardiac Ambulatory Care Sensitive and Mental Health Conditions: Qualitative Interview and Focus Group Study with Patients and Physicians
title_fullStr Emergency Departments as Care Providers for Patients with Cardiac Ambulatory Care Sensitive and Mental Health Conditions: Qualitative Interview and Focus Group Study with Patients and Physicians
title_full_unstemmed Emergency Departments as Care Providers for Patients with Cardiac Ambulatory Care Sensitive and Mental Health Conditions: Qualitative Interview and Focus Group Study with Patients and Physicians
title_short Emergency Departments as Care Providers for Patients with Cardiac Ambulatory Care Sensitive and Mental Health Conditions: Qualitative Interview and Focus Group Study with Patients and Physicians
title_sort emergency departments as care providers for patients with cardiac ambulatory care sensitive and mental health conditions: qualitative interview and focus group study with patients and physicians
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9141444/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35627633
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19106098
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