Abstract
People with complex health and social needs, including tri‐morbidity and homelessness, are challenging for modern healthcare systems. These clients have poor health and social outcomes. They tend to use available health resources inefficiently, with fragmented, uncoordinated use of multiple health and social care services. Increasing access for these clients to well‐supported general practice care may be an effective response to these challenges. The aim of this study was to explore client experiences of, and attitudes to, community‐based healthcare, and general practice in particular, to identify opportunities to improve healthcare provision. Five focus groups with a total of 20 men currently experiencing homelessness were facilitated by the corresponding author in an inner‐city homeless hostel. Discussions were transcribed, coded and analysed thematically. The analysis was informed by earlier focus group discussions with community‐based homeless healthcare providers. Participants reported reluctance to engage with healthcare providers outside times of perceived crisis, and experiences of stigma and dismissive care. Some participants were sceptical of the motivations of health and social care providers, including general practitioners. Presentations with physical and psychological pain featured prominently in participant accounts. Three key themes identified important aspects of client experiences of community‐based healthcare which indicate potential areas for improvement. These themes were as follows: the relative invisibility and low salience of general practice compared to hospital‐based emergency and inpatient services; discontinuity within community‐based healthcare and across transitions between community‐based and other healthcare; and inconsistent and unsatisfactory general practitioner responses to physical and psychological pain. These responses included apparent over‐prescribing, under‐prescribing and short‐term ‘band‐aid’ responses. Generalist medical expertise was valued in general practitioners, but not consistently experienced. A number of challenges and opportunities exist, at both individual and system levels, for general practice to realise its potential to deliver effective, compassionate and efficient care to clients experiencing homelessness.