Implementation of remote units in two large out-of-hours emergency primary care districts in Norway

Objective An inter-municipal out-of-hours (OOH) district covers several municipalities with one centralized casualty clinic. These OOH districts are large geographical areas with long driving times to the casualty clinic. Remote OOH units were established in two OOH districts in Norway, to secure be...

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Main Authors: Erik Zakariassen, Steinar Hunskaar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2025-07-01
Series:Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care
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Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/02813432.2025.2470470
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author Erik Zakariassen
Steinar Hunskaar
author_facet Erik Zakariassen
Steinar Hunskaar
author_sort Erik Zakariassen
collection DOAJ
description Objective An inter-municipal out-of-hours (OOH) district covers several municipalities with one centralized casualty clinic. These OOH districts are large geographical areas with long driving times to the casualty clinic. Remote OOH units were established in two OOH districts in Norway, to secure better access to the OOH service. Patients were offered video consultations with nurse-led appointments at the remote OOH units. The aim was to investigate contact rates and distribution of consultation types before and after the remote units were established. Design. An observational study with pre- and post-data collected from municipalities with and without (controls) remote OOH units.Setting Two OOH districts, Førde and Molde, with five and four remote OOH units, respectively.Subjects Inhabitants contacting the Local Emergency Communications Centers (LEMCs) in the two areas.Results In municipalities that established remote OOH units the contact rates to the LEMCs decreased by 15% in Førde and 16% in the Molde OOH districts in 2021, compared with 2019. Control municipalities had an increased rate of 7% and 2%, respectively. Consultation rates decreased by 16% and 12% in municipalities with remote OOH units in Førde and Molde, respectively. In 2021, 7% of contacts from municipalities with remote OOH units in Førde OOH district and 3% in Molde OOH district ended in a consultation at a remote OOH unit. In the Molde OOH district, where the traditional casualty clinic was replaced with remote OOH units, home visits and callouts decreased by 76% and 86% from 2019 to 2021.Conclusion Establishing remote OOH units could have decreased contact and consultation rates in both districts. Most contacts were handled with actions other than a remote OOH unit encounter with video consultation. There was a large reduction of home visits and callouts in the Molde OOH district in 2021, compared with 2019.
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spelling doaj-art-4577321024e54c6689ba2f9ea7deb1012025-08-23T12:51:53ZengTaylor & Francis GroupScandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care0281-34321502-77242025-07-0143353854510.1080/02813432.2025.2470470Implementation of remote units in two large out-of-hours emergency primary care districts in NorwayErik Zakariassen0Steinar Hunskaar1National Centre for Emergency Primary Health Care, NORCE, Norwegian Research Centre, Bergen, NorwayNational Centre for Emergency Primary Health Care, NORCE, Norwegian Research Centre, Bergen, NorwayObjective An inter-municipal out-of-hours (OOH) district covers several municipalities with one centralized casualty clinic. These OOH districts are large geographical areas with long driving times to the casualty clinic. Remote OOH units were established in two OOH districts in Norway, to secure better access to the OOH service. Patients were offered video consultations with nurse-led appointments at the remote OOH units. The aim was to investigate contact rates and distribution of consultation types before and after the remote units were established. Design. An observational study with pre- and post-data collected from municipalities with and without (controls) remote OOH units.Setting Two OOH districts, Førde and Molde, with five and four remote OOH units, respectively.Subjects Inhabitants contacting the Local Emergency Communications Centers (LEMCs) in the two areas.Results In municipalities that established remote OOH units the contact rates to the LEMCs decreased by 15% in Førde and 16% in the Molde OOH districts in 2021, compared with 2019. Control municipalities had an increased rate of 7% and 2%, respectively. Consultation rates decreased by 16% and 12% in municipalities with remote OOH units in Førde and Molde, respectively. In 2021, 7% of contacts from municipalities with remote OOH units in Førde OOH district and 3% in Molde OOH district ended in a consultation at a remote OOH unit. In the Molde OOH district, where the traditional casualty clinic was replaced with remote OOH units, home visits and callouts decreased by 76% and 86% from 2019 to 2021.Conclusion Establishing remote OOH units could have decreased contact and consultation rates in both districts. Most contacts were handled with actions other than a remote OOH unit encounter with video consultation. There was a large reduction of home visits and callouts in the Molde OOH district in 2021, compared with 2019.https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/02813432.2025.2470470Out-of-hours carecasualty clinicprehospital emergency caretelemedicineNorway
spellingShingle Erik Zakariassen
Steinar Hunskaar
Implementation of remote units in two large out-of-hours emergency primary care districts in Norway
Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care
Out-of-hours care
casualty clinic
prehospital emergency care
telemedicine
Norway
title Implementation of remote units in two large out-of-hours emergency primary care districts in Norway
title_full Implementation of remote units in two large out-of-hours emergency primary care districts in Norway
title_fullStr Implementation of remote units in two large out-of-hours emergency primary care districts in Norway
title_full_unstemmed Implementation of remote units in two large out-of-hours emergency primary care districts in Norway
title_short Implementation of remote units in two large out-of-hours emergency primary care districts in Norway
title_sort implementation of remote units in two large out of hours emergency primary care districts in norway
topic Out-of-hours care
casualty clinic
prehospital emergency care
telemedicine
Norway
url https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/02813432.2025.2470470
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