RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Patients’ missed appointments in academic family practices in Quebec JF Canadian Family Physician JO Can Fam Physician FD The College of Family Physicians of Canada SP 349 OP 355 VO 66 IS 5 A1 Jessica Claveau A1 Marie Authier A1 Isabel Rodrigues A1 Maxime Crevier-Tousignant YR 2020 UL http://www.cfp.ca/content/66/5/349.abstract AB Objective To determine the prevalence of no-show patients in 4 family medicine teaching units (FMTUs) and to investigate the reasons given by patients for past missed appointments in order to identify factors that could be acted on to improve access to care.Design Retrospective data collection through electronic medical records and a self-administered survey.Setting Four FMTUs at the University of Montreal in Quebec.Participants Patients older than 18 years of age (or younger patients’ guardians) who were able to read French and had visited the clinic at least once.Main outcomes measures No-show prevalence among patients scheduled to see different types of health care professionals, and patients’ reasons for past missed appointments and for not notifying the clinic before missing an appointment.Results The overall prevalence of no-show patients was 7.8% (2700 missed appointments of 34 619 scheduled appointments), ranging from 6.3% to 9.0% among the 4 FMTUs. The survey participation rate was 91.0% (1757 completed surveys of 1930 distributed surveys). A total of 19.1% of respondents acknowledged previous no-show behaviour. Resolved issues (22.9%) and work obligations (19.4%) were the most frequent personal reasons for missing an appointment, whereas inconvenient timing of the appointment (17.0%), delay before the appointment (14.6%), and lack of confirmation (13.7%) were the most frequent organizational reasons. The most frequent reason for not notifying the clinic of the absence was forgetting to call (55.2%).Conclusion The no-show phenomenon, although not very prevalent in our clinics, is present and can potentially affect access to care. Reasons for missing an appointment without notifying the clinic are varied and point toward different potential solutions to reduce no-shows. Educating patients about the importance of informing the clinic when they cannot come, offering a wider range of appointment dates and times, systematically confirming appointments, improving telephone service, and offering different methods to communicate with the clinic could all be solutions to improve access to care.