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Investigating Patient Use and Experience of Online Appointment Booking in Primary Care: Mixed Methods Study (Preprint): Mixed Methods Study

Investigating Patient Use and Experience of Online Appointment Booking in Primary Care: Mixed Methods Study (Preprint): Mixed Methods Study
Investigating Patient Use and Experience of Online Appointment Booking in Primary Care: Mixed Methods Study (Preprint): Mixed Methods Study

Background: Online appointment booking is a commonly used tool in several industries. There is limited evidence about the benefits and challenges of using online appointment booking in health care settings. Potential benefits include convenience and the ability to track appointments, although some groups of patients may find it harder to engage with online appointment booking. We sought to understand how patients in England used and experienced online appointment booking. Objective: This study aims to describe and compare the characteristics of patients in relation to their use of online appointment booking in general practice and investigate patients’ views regarding online appointment booking arrangements. Methods: This was a mixed methods study set in English general practice comprising a retrospective analysis of the General Practice Patient Survey (GPPS) and semistructured interviews with patients. Data used in the retrospective analysis comprised responses to the 2018 and 2019 GPPS analyzed using mixed-effects logistic regression. Semistructured interviews with purposively sampled patients from 11 general practices in England explored experiences of and views on online appointment booking. Framework analysis was used to allow for comparison with the findings of the retrospective analysis. Results: The retrospective analysis included 1,327,693 GPPS responders (2018-2019 combined). We conducted 43 interviews with patients with a variety of experiences and awareness of online appointment booking; of these 43 patients, 6 (14%) were from ethnic minority groups. In the retrospective analysis, more patients were aware that online appointment booking was available (581,224/1,288,341, 45.11%) than had experience using it (203,184/1,301,694, 15.61%). There were deprivation gradients for awareness and use and a substantial decline in both awareness and use in patients aged >75 years. For interview participants, age and life stage were factors influencing experiences and perceptions, working patients valued convenience, and older patients preferred to use the telephone. Patients with long-term conditions were more aware of (odds ratio [OR] 1.43, 95% CI 1.41-1.44) and more likely to use (OR 1.65, 95% CI 1.63-1.67) online appointment booking. Interview participants with long-term conditions described online appointment booking as useful for routine nonurgent appointments. Patients in deprived areas were clustered in practices with low awareness and use of online appointment booking among GPPS respondents (OR for use 0.65, 95% CI 0.64-0.67). Other key findings included the influence of the availability of appointments online and differences in the registration process for accessing online booking. Conclusions: Whether and how patients engage with online appointment booking is influenced by the practice with which they are registered, whether they live with long-term conditions, and their deprivation status. These factors should be considered in designing and implementing online appointment booking and have implications for patient engagement with the wider range of online services offered in general practice.

appointment, general practice, mobile phone, online systems, patient appointments, primary health care, qualitative research, secondary data analysis
1438-8871
Atherton, Helen
9bb8932e-7bb7-4781-ab97-114613de99b1
Eccles, Abi
a4b3ae4d-5f92-405d-a8f1-b90ec4eb85cf
Poltawski, Leon
1bb9e733-6ba6-446d-a8e6-57d19af444c8
Dale, Jeremy
19fccbd2-1661-4d84-8a94-36bedb12a0e2
Campbell, John
40fcc705-8391-4cde-bb69-266bbb7f23ed
Abel, Gary
d14838f4-2a59-4dec-b3ac-527030888e44
Atherton, Helen
9bb8932e-7bb7-4781-ab97-114613de99b1
Eccles, Abi
a4b3ae4d-5f92-405d-a8f1-b90ec4eb85cf
Poltawski, Leon
1bb9e733-6ba6-446d-a8e6-57d19af444c8
Dale, Jeremy
19fccbd2-1661-4d84-8a94-36bedb12a0e2
Campbell, John
40fcc705-8391-4cde-bb69-266bbb7f23ed
Abel, Gary
d14838f4-2a59-4dec-b3ac-527030888e44

Atherton, Helen, Eccles, Abi, Poltawski, Leon, Dale, Jeremy, Campbell, John and Abel, Gary (2024) Investigating Patient Use and Experience of Online Appointment Booking in Primary Care: Mixed Methods Study (Preprint): Mixed Methods Study. Journal of Medical Internet Research, 26 (1), [e51931]. (doi:10.2196/51931).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Online appointment booking is a commonly used tool in several industries. There is limited evidence about the benefits and challenges of using online appointment booking in health care settings. Potential benefits include convenience and the ability to track appointments, although some groups of patients may find it harder to engage with online appointment booking. We sought to understand how patients in England used and experienced online appointment booking. Objective: This study aims to describe and compare the characteristics of patients in relation to their use of online appointment booking in general practice and investigate patients’ views regarding online appointment booking arrangements. Methods: This was a mixed methods study set in English general practice comprising a retrospective analysis of the General Practice Patient Survey (GPPS) and semistructured interviews with patients. Data used in the retrospective analysis comprised responses to the 2018 and 2019 GPPS analyzed using mixed-effects logistic regression. Semistructured interviews with purposively sampled patients from 11 general practices in England explored experiences of and views on online appointment booking. Framework analysis was used to allow for comparison with the findings of the retrospective analysis. Results: The retrospective analysis included 1,327,693 GPPS responders (2018-2019 combined). We conducted 43 interviews with patients with a variety of experiences and awareness of online appointment booking; of these 43 patients, 6 (14%) were from ethnic minority groups. In the retrospective analysis, more patients were aware that online appointment booking was available (581,224/1,288,341, 45.11%) than had experience using it (203,184/1,301,694, 15.61%). There were deprivation gradients for awareness and use and a substantial decline in both awareness and use in patients aged >75 years. For interview participants, age and life stage were factors influencing experiences and perceptions, working patients valued convenience, and older patients preferred to use the telephone. Patients with long-term conditions were more aware of (odds ratio [OR] 1.43, 95% CI 1.41-1.44) and more likely to use (OR 1.65, 95% CI 1.63-1.67) online appointment booking. Interview participants with long-term conditions described online appointment booking as useful for routine nonurgent appointments. Patients in deprived areas were clustered in practices with low awareness and use of online appointment booking among GPPS respondents (OR for use 0.65, 95% CI 0.64-0.67). Other key findings included the influence of the availability of appointments online and differences in the registration process for accessing online booking. Conclusions: Whether and how patients engage with online appointment booking is influenced by the practice with which they are registered, whether they live with long-term conditions, and their deprivation status. These factors should be considered in designing and implementing online appointment booking and have implications for patient engagement with the wider range of online services offered in general practice.

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More information

Submitted date: 17 August 2023
Accepted/In Press date: 18 May 2024
Published date: 8 July 2024
Additional Information: For the purpose of open access, the author has applied a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising from this submission. ©Helen Atherton, Abi Eccles, Leon Poltawski, Jeremy Dale, John Campbell, Gary Abel. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (https://www.jmir.org), 08.07.2024.
Keywords: appointment, general practice, mobile phone, online systems, patient appointments, primary health care, qualitative research, secondary data analysis

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 490758
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/490758
ISSN: 1438-8871
PURE UUID: 5f1e80d0-8601-46aa-8648-8a8f2bad133f
ORCID for Helen Atherton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7072-1925

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Date deposited: 06 Jun 2024 16:35
Last modified: 31 Jul 2024 04:02

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Contributors

Author: Helen Atherton ORCID iD
Author: Abi Eccles
Author: Leon Poltawski
Author: Jeremy Dale
Author: John Campbell
Author: Gary Abel

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