“I surely don’t call for fun”: experiences of being a “frequent caller” to the Danish emergency helpline

Abstract Background While most Danish citizens never or very rarely call the national emergency helpline, 1-1-2, a few citizens call very often. In this article, we attend to the often-unheard voices of frequent callers, exploring why these citizens call 1-1-2 and why they often do not feel helped....

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Main Authors: Camilla Braendstrup Laursen, Tine Bennedsen Gehrt, Linda Huibers, Claus Bossen, Ulla Vaeggemose
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-01-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-21390-7
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author Camilla Braendstrup Laursen
Tine Bennedsen Gehrt
Linda Huibers
Claus Bossen
Ulla Vaeggemose
author_facet Camilla Braendstrup Laursen
Tine Bennedsen Gehrt
Linda Huibers
Claus Bossen
Ulla Vaeggemose
author_sort Camilla Braendstrup Laursen
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background While most Danish citizens never or very rarely call the national emergency helpline, 1-1-2, a few citizens call very often. In this article, we attend to the often-unheard voices of frequent callers, exploring why these citizens call 1-1-2 and why they often do not feel helped. Methods The article is based on a mixed-methods study on citizens in the Central Denmark Region who had called 1-1-2 five or more times during a period of six months in 2023. The study drew on call data, questionnaires, and telephone interviews. In this article, we focus on the 12 citizens who participated in a semi-structured telephone interview. The interviews were transcribed verbatim and coded twice. Through abductive analysis of the data, we found Desjarlais’ concept of “struggling along” to be a useful theoretical lens. Results We found that our study participants “struggled along” in life and that they called 1-1-2 when they could not cope with their health conditions and difficult life circumstances themselves, and when neither their social networks nor the welfare society could help them out. Furthermore, we found that the sense of disorientation and the fragmentation of experience that is characteristic of “struggling along” made it difficult for our study participants to communicate with the Emergency Medical Coordination Center (EMCC) that manages all health-related calls to 1-1-2. Finally, our analysis pointed to differences in how the goal of providing “the right help at the right time” was understood by citizens and by health professionals working within the EMCC of the Prehospital Emergency Medical Services. Conclusions Overall, our study adds to the very limited literature on the experiences of frequent callers to emergency medical helplines. It emphasizes that frequent callers are people who call for help because they continue to need help, and it points towards the necessity of developing alternative interventions to help this diverse group of people.
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spelling doaj-art-9bbc4607b1f041f5aca7552830dd371d2025-02-02T12:46:29ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582025-01-0125111210.1186/s12889-025-21390-7“I surely don’t call for fun”: experiences of being a “frequent caller” to the Danish emergency helplineCamilla Braendstrup Laursen0Tine Bennedsen Gehrt1Linda Huibers2Claus Bossen3Ulla Vaeggemose4Department of Research and Development, Central Denmark Region, The Prehospital Emergency Medical ServicesDepartment of Research and Development, Central Denmark Region, The Prehospital Emergency Medical ServicesResearch Unit for General PracticeDepartment of Digital Design and Information Studies, Aarhus UniversityDepartment of Research and Development, Central Denmark Region, The Prehospital Emergency Medical ServicesAbstract Background While most Danish citizens never or very rarely call the national emergency helpline, 1-1-2, a few citizens call very often. In this article, we attend to the often-unheard voices of frequent callers, exploring why these citizens call 1-1-2 and why they often do not feel helped. Methods The article is based on a mixed-methods study on citizens in the Central Denmark Region who had called 1-1-2 five or more times during a period of six months in 2023. The study drew on call data, questionnaires, and telephone interviews. In this article, we focus on the 12 citizens who participated in a semi-structured telephone interview. The interviews were transcribed verbatim and coded twice. Through abductive analysis of the data, we found Desjarlais’ concept of “struggling along” to be a useful theoretical lens. Results We found that our study participants “struggled along” in life and that they called 1-1-2 when they could not cope with their health conditions and difficult life circumstances themselves, and when neither their social networks nor the welfare society could help them out. Furthermore, we found that the sense of disorientation and the fragmentation of experience that is characteristic of “struggling along” made it difficult for our study participants to communicate with the Emergency Medical Coordination Center (EMCC) that manages all health-related calls to 1-1-2. Finally, our analysis pointed to differences in how the goal of providing “the right help at the right time” was understood by citizens and by health professionals working within the EMCC of the Prehospital Emergency Medical Services. Conclusions Overall, our study adds to the very limited literature on the experiences of frequent callers to emergency medical helplines. It emphasizes that frequent callers are people who call for help because they continue to need help, and it points towards the necessity of developing alternative interventions to help this diverse group of people.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-21390-7DenmarkEmergency careFrequent callersExperiencePatient perspectivesPrehospital emergency medical services
spellingShingle Camilla Braendstrup Laursen
Tine Bennedsen Gehrt
Linda Huibers
Claus Bossen
Ulla Vaeggemose
“I surely don’t call for fun”: experiences of being a “frequent caller” to the Danish emergency helpline
BMC Public Health
Denmark
Emergency care
Frequent callers
Experience
Patient perspectives
Prehospital emergency medical services
title “I surely don’t call for fun”: experiences of being a “frequent caller” to the Danish emergency helpline
title_full “I surely don’t call for fun”: experiences of being a “frequent caller” to the Danish emergency helpline
title_fullStr “I surely don’t call for fun”: experiences of being a “frequent caller” to the Danish emergency helpline
title_full_unstemmed “I surely don’t call for fun”: experiences of being a “frequent caller” to the Danish emergency helpline
title_short “I surely don’t call for fun”: experiences of being a “frequent caller” to the Danish emergency helpline
title_sort i surely don t call for fun experiences of being a frequent caller to the danish emergency helpline
topic Denmark
Emergency care
Frequent callers
Experience
Patient perspectives
Prehospital emergency medical services
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-21390-7
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