Table 3.
Box | Impact | Evidence | Source |
---|---|---|---|
10 | Consumer ability to perceive | Patients’ knowledge about PHC services increased, contributing to increased patients’ ability to perceive need for care. | Interviews |
11 | Consumer ability to seek | Exposure to services at the pop-ups improved patients’ knowledge about healthcare options they could access after the pop-up. | Interviews |
12 | Consumer ability to reach social/ community services | Patients were more aware of how to reach services after the pop-up. | Interviews |
13 | Consumer ability to reach PMC | Primary care practitioners accepted new patients at the pop-ups for ongoing PHC and consumers were able to reach these services after the pop-up. | interviews |
20, 22 | Health providers (incl GP/FPs), community, social service providers have knowledge skills & confidence |
After the pop-ups, service providers reported they understood barriers faced by people accessing care and how to mitigate these barriers. Interview data indicated this knowledge was enhanced by participation in the intervention. |
Other provider survey, interviews |
21 | Services have policies, processes, procedures | Service providers reported they assessed and, where required, modified their organization’s policies, processes and procedures based on what was learned at the pop-up events. | Interviews |
30 | Collaborative inter-professional working relationships |
After the pop-ups, service providers reported that their organizations do inter-organizational planning “well”. Interview data suggested increased collaboration between service providers because of their experience at the pop-ups. |
Other provider survey, interviews |
31 | Appropriate referrals |
After the pop-ups, service providers reported that their organizations do referrals “well”. Interview data indicated that service providers continued to implement the principle of warm handoffs in standard care after the pop-ups. |
Other provider survey, interviews |