Literature DB >> 18036885

Do general practitioners change how they use the computer during consultations with a significant psychological component?

Wai-Sun Chan1, Michael Stevenson, Kieran McGlade.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To describe the patterns of computer use during patient visits to family doctors and to determine whether doctors alter their pattern of computer use in consultations which have significant psychological content.
DESIGN: Observational, non-randomised cluster trial with data being collected from videotaped consultations.
SETTING: Three inner-city Family Practice offices involved in physician training in Belfast, Northern Ireland. PARTICIPANTS: Ten family doctors, who declared using computers during their consultations and consecutive consenting adult patients attending these doctors.
RESULTS: One hundred consultations were videotaped (59% patient participation rate). The average consultation time was 9min 48s, and number of problems per consultation was 1.9. Three broad styles of computer use were defined: (1) "end users" who only used the computer at the end of a consultation to summarise the consultation, (2) "continuous users", who interacted with the computer throughout the consultation, and (3) "minimal users", who only ever used the computer at the end of the consultation mostly to issue prescriptions. Of the 100 consultations videoed 37% were of a psychological nature. Consultations with psychological content were on average longer (11min 47s vs. 8min 39s) and the average percentage time doctors spent on the computer was about half that of non-psychological consultations (11% vs. 23% and p<0.001).
CONCLUSION: The doctors were found to adopt one of three broad styles of computer use during their consultations. In consultations with observable significant psychological content doctors significantly reduce the proportion of time at the computer suggesting an ability to appropriately tailor their use of the computer during consultations.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 18036885     DOI: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2007.10.005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Med Inform        ISSN: 1386-5056            Impact factor:   4.046


  14 in total

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4.  The patient and the computer in the primary care consultation.

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5.  Primary care physicians' use of an electronic medical record system: a cognitive task analysis.

Authors:  Aviv Shachak; Michal Hadas-Dayagi; Amitai Ziv; Shmuel Reis
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Review 6.  Computers in the clinical encounter: a scoping review and thematic analysis.

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7.  More screen time, less face time - implications for EHR design.

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Review 8.  Impact of electronic medical record on physician practice in office settings: a systematic review.

Authors:  Francis Lau; Morgan Price; Jeanette Boyd; Colin Partridge; Heidi Bell; Rebecca Raworth
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9.  A multidisciplinary primary care team consultation in a socio-economically deprived community: an exploratory randomised controlled trial.

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10.  The electronic medical record and Patient-centered care.

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