| Literature DB >> 12857665 |
Madhavi R Patt1, Thomas K Houston, Mollie W Jenckes, Daniel Z Sands, Daniel E Ford.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite the potential for rapid, asynchronous, documentable communication, the use of e-mail for physician-patient communication has not been widely adopted.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2003 PMID: 12857665 PMCID: PMC1550557 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.5.2.e9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Demographic characteristics of physicians interviewed (n = 45)
| Characteristic | Percent |
| Age (years) | |
| <<35 | 9 |
| 35-55 | 73 |
| Over 55 | 18 |
| Gender | |
| Male | 82 |
| Female | 18 |
| Specialty | |
| Generalists (general internal medicine, family practice, general pediatrics, general psych, preventive medicine) | 64 |
| Specialists (internal medicine, pediatrics) | 20 |
| Surgery | 7 |
| Emergency room | 2 |
| Obstetrics/Gynecology | 7 |
| Number of daily email exchanges | |
| 1-5 | 87 |
| 6-10 | 9 |
| 11-15 | 2 |
| >>15 | 2 |
| Would recommend doctor-patient e-mail communication to a colleague | |
| Yes | 84 |
| No | 16 |
Taxonomy of comments
| I. E-MAIL ACCESS AND CONTENT |
| E-MAIL AS AN ALTERNATIVE OPTION FOR PATIENTS |
| E-MAIL IMPROVES ACCESSIBILITY |
| Direct access to provider |
| Increases access to patients and providers away from office setting |
| ISSUES ADDRESSED VIA E-MAIL |
| Sensitive issues |
| Emergencies |
| Inappropriate |
| General information |
| Limitations |
| II. E-MAIL AND THE DOCTOR-PATIENT RELATIONSHIP |
| CONCERN REGARDING CONFIDENTIALITY |
| IMPACT OF E-MAIL ON TRUST/RAPPORT |
| III. MANAGING CLINICAL ISSUES BY E-MAIL |
| USE OF E-MAIL FOR CHRONIC DISEASE MANAGEMENT |
| USE OF E-MAIL FOR PATIENT EDUCATION |
| USE OF E-MAIL FOR RX REQUESTS |
| USE OF E-MAIL TO IMPROVE CONTINUITY OF PATIENT CARE |
| Previsit information |
| Followup |
| IV. INTEGRATING E-MAIL INTO OFFICE PROCESSES |
| GETTING STARTED USING E-MAIL WITH PATIENTS |
| Acceptance by physicians and patients |
| Promotion and initiation of e-mail use with patients |
| Selection of patients |
| POLICIES ON HOW TO USE E-MAIL |
| General |
| Medicolegal |
| Reimbursement |
| E-MAIL AND VOLUME OF PATIENT CARE |
| Ability to address more issues |
| Concern regarding overuse of e-mail by patients |
| IMPACT OF E-MAIL ON PRACTICE EFFICIENCY |
| Increased convenience and flexibility for patients and physicians |
| Managing time demands of physicians and patients |
| Volume insufficient to notice significant change in practice |
| INCORPORATING E-MAIL INTO DAILY OFFICE WORKFLOW |
| Documentation |
| Technical problems - information technology related |
| Use of office personnel |
| Responding to e-mail in timely manner |