The place of information and communication technology-mediated consultations in primary care: GPs' perspectives
The place of information and communication technology-mediated consultations in primary care: GPs' perspectives
Background. New information and communication technologies such as email and text messaging have been shown to be useful in some aspects of primary care service delivery. Little is known about Scottish GPs’ attitudes towards the adoption of these technologies as routine consultation tools.
Objectives. To explore GPs’ perceptions of the potential place of new non-face-to-face consultation technologies in the routine delivery of primary care; to explore GPs’ perceived barriers to the introduction of these technologies and to identify the processes by which GPs feel that new consultation technologies could be incorporated into routine primary care.
Methods. Qualitative interview study: 20 in-depth semi-structured interviews carried out with maximum variation sample of GPs across Scotland.
Results. Whilst the face-to-face consultation was seen as central to much of the clinical and diagnostic work of primary care, many GPs were conditionally willing to consider using new technologies in the future, particularly to carry out administrative or less complex tasks and therefore maximize practice efficiency and patient convenience. Key considerations were access to appropriate training, IT support and medico-legal guidance.
Conclusions. GPs are conditionally willing to use new consultation media if clinically appropriate and if medico-legal and technical support is available.
electronic mail, general practice, qualitative research, telemedicine
Hanna, Lisa
c8330e1a-3365-406c-a23a-3c8e11f1820d
May, Carl
17697f8d-98f6-40d3-9cc0-022f04009ae4
Fairhurst, Karen
1ec1717d-ecff-4ccc-8e86-5eda901e13f1
Hanna, Lisa
c8330e1a-3365-406c-a23a-3c8e11f1820d
May, Carl
17697f8d-98f6-40d3-9cc0-022f04009ae4
Fairhurst, Karen
1ec1717d-ecff-4ccc-8e86-5eda901e13f1
Hanna, Lisa, May, Carl and Fairhurst, Karen
(2011)
The place of information and communication technology-mediated consultations in primary care: GPs' perspectives.
Family Practice.
(doi:10.1093/fampra/cmr087).
(PMID:22006040)
Abstract
Background. New information and communication technologies such as email and text messaging have been shown to be useful in some aspects of primary care service delivery. Little is known about Scottish GPs’ attitudes towards the adoption of these technologies as routine consultation tools.
Objectives. To explore GPs’ perceptions of the potential place of new non-face-to-face consultation technologies in the routine delivery of primary care; to explore GPs’ perceived barriers to the introduction of these technologies and to identify the processes by which GPs feel that new consultation technologies could be incorporated into routine primary care.
Methods. Qualitative interview study: 20 in-depth semi-structured interviews carried out with maximum variation sample of GPs across Scotland.
Results. Whilst the face-to-face consultation was seen as central to much of the clinical and diagnostic work of primary care, many GPs were conditionally willing to consider using new technologies in the future, particularly to carry out administrative or less complex tasks and therefore maximize practice efficiency and patient convenience. Key considerations were access to appropriate training, IT support and medico-legal guidance.
Conclusions. GPs are conditionally willing to use new consultation media if clinically appropriate and if medico-legal and technical support is available.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 17 October 2011
Keywords:
electronic mail, general practice, qualitative research, telemedicine
Organisations:
Faculty of Health Sciences
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 200951
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/200951
ISSN: 0263-2136
PURE UUID: 5d5a4b93-b6b9-43ed-8277-265fdbdb40e2
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Date deposited: 25 Oct 2011 10:34
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 04:20
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Contributors
Author:
Lisa Hanna
Author:
Carl May
Author:
Karen Fairhurst
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