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Older patients experiences of access to and use of e-consultations with the general practitioner in Norway: an interview study

Older patients experiences of access to and use of e-consultations with the general practitioner in Norway: an interview study
Older patients experiences of access to and use of e-consultations with the general practitioner in Norway: an interview study
Objective: to explore older patients’ experiences with accessing and using e-consultations to send text-based clinical inquiries to the general practitioner (GP) online.

Design: qualitative study based on semi-structured interviews. Results were analysed through a six-phase thematic analysis and interpreted through Levesque’s framework of patient-centred access to health care.

Setting: general practice in Norway.

Subjects: patients aged over 65 years (n = 16) with experience in using e-consultations.

Results: respondents considered e-consultations as an integrated part of general practice which helped them achieve better access to health care. We identified four themes describing older patients’ access to and use of e-consultations: 1) the importance of digital health literacy to learn about and use the service – and the fear of losing it, 2) the high availability of the service as the main advantage, due to the perceived unavailability of physical GP services, 3) the importance of voluntary use of e-consultations, 4) the importance of a trusting relationship with the GP.

Implications: information about e-consultations and guidelines for suitable use are recommended to ensure equal access to all patients, regardless of their digital health literacy. Availability problems and high work burdens for the GPs could affect the patients’ choice for using e-consultations. If e-consultations are used for triage purposes, caution should be taken to avoid a shift in workload from the health secretary to the GP.
0281-3432
33-42
Kristiansen, Eli
db1c2256-8464-4a12-975c-1c722b0dd086
Atherton, Helen
9bb8932e-7bb7-4781-ab97-114613de99b1
Austad, Bjarne
56e95f20-6d7e-4194-bf02-2f7fe768b48b
Bergmo, Trine
94a66699-b8a9-4fe8-9bfa-09cc995d5d80
Norberg, Børge Lønnebakke
435138a2-c7fe-4574-944b-220bf0fa39d2
Zanaboni, Paolo
807d46bf-a67b-4c22-89ff-7f8bafed2049
Kristiansen, Eli
db1c2256-8464-4a12-975c-1c722b0dd086
Atherton, Helen
9bb8932e-7bb7-4781-ab97-114613de99b1
Austad, Bjarne
56e95f20-6d7e-4194-bf02-2f7fe768b48b
Bergmo, Trine
94a66699-b8a9-4fe8-9bfa-09cc995d5d80
Norberg, Børge Lønnebakke
435138a2-c7fe-4574-944b-220bf0fa39d2
Zanaboni, Paolo
807d46bf-a67b-4c22-89ff-7f8bafed2049

Kristiansen, Eli, Atherton, Helen, Austad, Bjarne, Bergmo, Trine, Norberg, Børge Lønnebakke and Zanaboni, Paolo (2023) Older patients experiences of access to and use of e-consultations with the general practitioner in Norway: an interview study. Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care, 41 (1), 33-42. (doi:10.1080/02813432.2022.2161307).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: to explore older patients’ experiences with accessing and using e-consultations to send text-based clinical inquiries to the general practitioner (GP) online.

Design: qualitative study based on semi-structured interviews. Results were analysed through a six-phase thematic analysis and interpreted through Levesque’s framework of patient-centred access to health care.

Setting: general practice in Norway.

Subjects: patients aged over 65 years (n = 16) with experience in using e-consultations.

Results: respondents considered e-consultations as an integrated part of general practice which helped them achieve better access to health care. We identified four themes describing older patients’ access to and use of e-consultations: 1) the importance of digital health literacy to learn about and use the service – and the fear of losing it, 2) the high availability of the service as the main advantage, due to the perceived unavailability of physical GP services, 3) the importance of voluntary use of e-consultations, 4) the importance of a trusting relationship with the GP.

Implications: information about e-consultations and guidelines for suitable use are recommended to ensure equal access to all patients, regardless of their digital health literacy. Availability problems and high work burdens for the GPs could affect the patients’ choice for using e-consultations. If e-consultations are used for triage purposes, caution should be taken to avoid a shift in workload from the health secretary to the GP.

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Accepted/In Press date: 18 December 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 2 January 2023

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 487278
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487278
ISSN: 0281-3432
PURE UUID: f1f06ee1-ba36-4be8-bfa4-eb24f50bbb1f
ORCID for Helen Atherton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7072-1925

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Date deposited: 16 Feb 2024 17:16
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:18

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Contributors

Author: Eli Kristiansen
Author: Helen Atherton ORCID iD
Author: Bjarne Austad
Author: Trine Bergmo
Author: Børge Lønnebakke Norberg
Author: Paolo Zanaboni

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