Access has been defined as the fit between the patient and the healthcare system,4 and as a multidimensional concept embracing not just availability but also utilisation, relevance, effectiveness and equity.5 The concept of access is also considered to apply to the ‘in-system’ experience as much as to entry to health care.6 As a result, the NHS model of access has been criticised as simplistic7 even by those responsible for its implementation,8 while patients and carers seek flexibility in its interpretation to allow a wider range of choices.9 A robust evidence base informed by the needs and priorities of patients and utilising better methodologies and instruments has been called for.10,11
A discrete choice experiment is a method of eliciting preferences that allows estimation of the relative importance of different aspects of care, the trade-offs between these aspects and the total satisfaction or utility that responders derive from healthcare services.12 It is used by economists for health services research because it reflects the type of decisions people make in daily life.13 In one small study of patient preferences for appointment making, which used this technique, time to appointment was the most important attribute, followed by length of wait in the waiting room and choice of doctor.13
How this fits in
Access to GPs is a public and political concern. Government policy is focused on improving speed of access, although patients are known to also value continuity of care and convenience. The weighting given to these aspects of access varies between patient groups, but in general patients value seeing the doctor of their choice above speed of access. This is particularly true for older patients, women and those with a long-standing physical condition.
We used a discrete choice experiment to estimate the relative importance to patients of three attributes (time to appointment, choice of time, choice of doctor) in making a routine appointment to see a GP.