Advanced Access in Primary Healthcare and Its Effects on Emergency Department Utilization: A Rapid Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Preparation of the Research Question
2.2. Database Search
2.3. Study Selection Criteria
- Articles that evaluate some form of advanced access as an intervention in primary healthcare.
- Articles that evaluated the use of emergency services as an outcome.
- Articles that do not evaluate the use of urgent and emergency services as an outcome.
- Articles that evaluate as the main space of care a space other than primary healthcare.
- Articles classified as systematic reviews.
2.4. Quality Assessment of Selected Studies
3. Results
Summary of Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
AA | Advanced access |
ED | Emergency department |
PHC | Primary healthcare |
WHO | World Health Organization |
TNAA | Third-next appointment available |
NOS | Newcastle-Ottawa Scale (NOS) |
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Population | Patients followed in primary healthcare who seek care in the emergency department |
Intervention | Advanced access or open access in PHC |
Comparator | Traditional access |
Outcomes | Reduction in demand for emergency services |
Author | Selection | Comparability | Outcome | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Representativeness of the Exposed Cohort | Selection of the Non-Exposed Cohort | Ascertainment of Exposure | Demonstration that Outcome of Interest Was Not Present at Start of the Study | Comparability of Cohorts on the Basis of the Design or Analysis | Ascertainment of Outcome | Was Follow-Up Long Enough for Outcomes to Occur | Adequacy of Follow Up of Cohorts | Total | |
Cook [31] | * | * | * | ** | * | * | * | 8 | |
Glass [34] | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | 7 | |
Yoon [32] | * | ** | * | * | * | 6 |
(A) Solberg et al., 2004 [35] | |
---|---|
Was the question or objective of the study clearly stated? | Yes |
Were the eligibility/selection criteria for the study population prespecified and clearly described? | Yes |
Were the participants in the study representative of those who would be eligible for the test/service/intervention in the general or clinical population of interest? | Yes |
Were all eligible participants that met the prespecified entry criteria enrolled? | Yes |
Was the sample size sufficiently large to provide confidence in the findings? | Yes |
Was the test/service/intervention clearly described and performed consistently in the study population? | Yes |
Were the outcome measures prespecified, clearly defined, valid, reliable, and assessed consistently across all study participants? | Yes |
Were the people assessing the outcomes blinded to the participants’ exposures/interventions? | No |
Was the loss to follow-up after baseline 20% or less? Were those lost to follow-up accounted for in the analysis? | Yes |
Did the statistical methods examine changes in outcome measures from before to after the intervention? Were statistical tests conducted that provided p values for the pre-to-post changes? | Yes |
Were outcome measures of interest taken multiple times before the intervention and multiple times after the intervention (i.e., did they use an interrupted time-series design)? | No |
If the intervention was conducted at a group level (e.g., a whole hospital, a community, etc.) did the statistical analysis take into account the use of individual-level data to determine effects at the group level? | Yes |
(B) Hudec, Macdougall, et al., 2010 [33] | |
Was the research question or objective in this paper clearly stated? | Yes |
Was the study population clearly specified and defined? | Yes |
Was the participation rate of eligible persons at least 50%? | Yes |
Was a sample size justification, power description, or variance and effect estimates provided? | Yes |
For the analyses in this paper, were the exposure(s) of interest measured prior to the outcome(s) being measured? | Yes |
Was the timeframe sufficient so that one could reasonably expect to see an association between exposure and outcome if it existed? | No |
For exposures that can vary in amount or level, did the study examine different levels of the exposure as related to the outcome (e.g., categories of exposure, or exposure measured as a continuous variable)? | No |
Were the exposure measures (independent variables) clearly defined, valid, reliable, and implemented consistently across all study participants? | No |
Was the exposure(s) assessed more than once over time? | No |
Were the outcome measures (dependent variables) clearly defined, valid, reliable, and implemented consistently across all study participants? | Yes |
Were the outcome assessors blinded to the exposure status of participants? | No |
Was loss to follow-up after baseline 20% or less? | Yes |
Were key potential confounding variables measured and adjusted statistically for their impact on the relationship between exposure(s) and outcome(s)? | Yes |
Author | Study Description | Intervention | Outcome |
---|---|---|---|
Glass 2017 [34] | Trends in visits and costs were compared between the intervention group (n = 1211) and the control group (n = 542,162) for six types of visits, including urgency and emergency. In the intervention group, a medical center was opened in the industry, eliminating the need to travel to obtain care and guaranteeing advanced access. The data before and after the intervention were compared in the two groups. | Implementation of a PHC center at the workplace, ensuring same-day access and no need to travel. Visits were divided into six categories, including urgency and emergency. | Reduction in emergency visits in the intervention group compared to the control group (−43% vs. −5%, p < 0.001). There were no differences in emergency visits. It is noted that PHC visits increased by 43% in the intervention group and only 4% in the control group (p < 0.001). |
Yoon 2015 [32] | Patients (n = 71,296) were identified from 22 VHA PHC clinics. Their use of services was obtained through VHA administrative systems, without individual patient identification. Same-day access was measured as the percentage of patients receiving care in PHC within less than 1 day of requesting care. The use of services was divided into 7 distinct groups. | Implementation, in 2010, of “Patient Aligned Care Teams”, focusing on improving access. Same-day access was defined as the percentage of patients receiving PHC within less than 1 day of request. | Clinics with low same-day access (<40% of patients receive same-day care) had more ED visits (p < 0.001). A 10% increase in patients receiving care the same day they requested it was associated with a 6% reduction in all-cause ED visits (p = 0.002). |
Solberg 2004 [35] | Approximately 7000 patients with diabetes, 3800 with cardiovascular disease, and 6000 patients with depression were included in the study. These patients were identified between 1998 and 2001. Their service utilization and cost were obtained from health plan administrative systems. The types of visits to the health service were grouped into four groups. The data were comparatively evaluated pre-intervention (improved access in 2001) and after intervention. | Complete advanced access in January 2001. Visits to the health service were grouped into four groups (>1 emergency visit, >1 urgency visit, >1 hospital admission, and length of hospital stay greater than 3 days). | Emergency room visits were reduced by approximately one-third (p < 0.001), but the change was not statistically significant in ED visits (p = 0.68/p = 0.78/p = 0.15). |
Cock 2020 [31] | 205 primary care physicians, with at least 13 TNAA measurements per year. The TNAA for each professional was obtained from the period between January 2009 and January 2017. The enrolled population of each patient was linked to the use of all outpatient levels, including emergency services. | Assessment of in three groups: improvement, stabilization, or worsening of TNAA. | Providers who improved their TNAA over a 1-year period saw a reduction in ED visits by 78 visits per 1000 patients per year (1.5 × 52 wk—p < 0.05). |
Hudec 2010 [33] | Semi-structured interviews were conducted with professionals from four teams (3 traditional access and 1 advanced access) and their reports were found, and reports on the use of emergency services were obtained from them. Economic indicators for the months of April, May, and June in the year of study and in the previous year were also evaluated. | Advanced access with results measured by self-reported questionnaire and costs. | In the interviews, the benefit of advanced access was cited as reducing the use of the emergency department. Based on economic indicators, a 28% reduction was observed in the triage of less urgent patients in the emergency department. |
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© 2025 by the authors. 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/).
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Tannure, R.; Sarkis, S.; Peres, A.; Lapa, J.d.S.; Rodrigues, L.V.; Landim, I.; Gomes, C.M.; Poças, K.C.; Peixoto, H.M.; Batista, S.R.R.; et al. Advanced Access in Primary Healthcare and Its Effects on Emergency Department Utilization: A Rapid Review. Healthcare 2025, 13, 1430. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13121430
Tannure R, Sarkis S, Peres A, Lapa JdS, Rodrigues LV, Landim I, Gomes CM, Poças KC, Peixoto HM, Batista SRR, et al. Advanced Access in Primary Healthcare and Its Effects on Emergency Department Utilization: A Rapid Review. Healthcare. 2025; 13(12):1430. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13121430
Chicago/Turabian StyleTannure, Rafael, Salma Sarkis, Amanda Peres, Juliana de Souza Lapa, Lígia Villela Rodrigues, Italo Landim, Ciro Martins Gomes, Katia Crestine Poças, Henry Maia Peixoto, Sandro Rogério Rodrigues Batista, and et al. 2025. "Advanced Access in Primary Healthcare and Its Effects on Emergency Department Utilization: A Rapid Review" Healthcare 13, no. 12: 1430. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13121430
APA StyleTannure, R., Sarkis, S., Peres, A., Lapa, J. d. S., Rodrigues, L. V., Landim, I., Gomes, C. M., Poças, K. C., Peixoto, H. M., Batista, S. R. R., & Deusdará, R. (2025). Advanced Access in Primary Healthcare and Its Effects on Emergency Department Utilization: A Rapid Review. Healthcare, 13(12), 1430. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13121430