| Literature DB >> 33035177 |
Rebecca Baines1, John Tredinnick-Rowe1, Ray Jones1, Arunangsu Chatterjee1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Often promoted as a way to address increasing demands, improve patient accessibility, and improve overall efficiency, electronic consultations are becoming increasingly common in primary care, particularly in light of the current COVID-19 pandemic. However, despite their increasing use, a theoretically informed understanding of the factors that support and inhibit their effective implementation is severely limited.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; implementation science; patient participation; primary health care; referral and consultation; remote consultation
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33035177 PMCID: PMC7674136 DOI: 10.2196/19375
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1PRISMA diagram of included studies. PRISMA: Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses.
Characteristics of included studies.
| Authors | Country | Study type | Intervention | Setting | Participants and databases | Analysis method |
| Atherton et al, 2018 [ | England and Scotland | Mixed methods case design | Alternatives to face-to-face consultations | General practices with varied experience of implementing alternatives to face-to-face consultations | Patients and practice staff | Descriptive statistics, multivariate analysis, and coding of qualitative data from EMIS Health |
| Banks et al, 2018 [ | West of England | Qualitative | eConsult | General practices that piloted an e-consultation system for 15 months during 2015 and 2016 | 23 semistructured interviews with staff members | Thematic analysis of interview data |
| Cowie et al, 2018 [ | Scotland | Mixed methods | eConsult | 11 general practices piloting eConsult | 44 semistructured practice staff interviews, 1 focus group (4 staff), and 291 patient survey responses | Health economics, thematic analysis and coding, patient survey, descriptive statistics |
| Carter et al, 2018 [ | South West England | Mixed methods | WebGP | 6 GP practices in Devon | Six practices provided consultations data; 20 GPs completed case reports (regarding 61 e-consults); 81 patients completed questionnaires; 5 GPs and 5 administrators were interviewed | Statistical analysis of surveys, thematic analysis of interview data |
| Farr et al, 2018 [ | South West England | Mixed methods | eConsult | 6 general practices | 23 practice staff interviews, patient survey data for 756 e-consultations from 36 practices | Economic analysis on usage and costs, Normalization Process Theory, inductive thematic analysis, patient survey and record data statistical analysis |
| Ogden, 2018 [ | N/Aa | Opinion piece | Online consulting | N/A | N/A | Descriptive statistics |
| Marshall et al, 2018 [ | N/A | Opinion piece | Online consulting | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Casey et al, 2017 [ | N/A | Mixed methods case study | Online consultation system | Inner-city general practice | Information technology developers, clinicians, and administrative staff | Thematic and discourse analysis of interview data |
| Edwards et al, 2017 [ | South West of England | Observational study | eConsult | South West of England | eConsult data obtained from 36 general practices | Economic analysis, website analytics, survey-based statistical analysis |
| Wise, 2017 [ | N/A | Opinion piece | Online consultations | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Hanna et al, 2012 [ | Scotland | Qualitative | Non–face-to-face consultations | Scotland | 20 semistructured interviews with general practitioners | Thematic analysis of interviews |
| Mair et al, 2012 [ | N/A | Systematic review | eHealth systems (only information pertaining to online consultations recorded) | N/A | MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, PsycINFO, and the Cochrane Library were searched for reviews published between January 1, 1995, and March 17, 2009. Studies had to be systematic reviews, narrative reviews, qualitative meta-syntheses or meta-ethnographies of eHealth implementation | Evidence synthesis |
| Hanna et al, 2011 [ | Scotland | Mixed methods | Non–face-to-face consultations | Scotland | 600 practice manager questionnaire responses, 20 practice manager interviews | Chi-squared test from a survey, thematic analysis of interviews |
aN/A: not applicable.
Identified barriers and facilitators to electronic consultation implementation and use.
| Normalization Process Theory domain | Barriers | Facilitators |
| Coherence |
Lack of understanding regarding its purpose and intended use |
Development of protocols, strategies, and guidance, including medicolegal advice Patient and staff education Focused marketing Wider consultation with patients and staff members prior to implementation |
| Participation |
Low uptake Mainly administrative requests Suitability for certain patient groups and conditions Contextual factors including practice size, deprivation, and geographical location Cost Limited patient involvement |
Staff training Strategic/targeted patient use for those most likely to benefit from electronic consultations Electronic consultation champion |
| Action |
Purposeful patient selection. Additional time or increased workload Medicolegal concerns The potential to “game” the system Information technology reliability |
Effective signposting informing patients of when to use electronic consultation and when not Notification alerts to alleviate administrative issues related to contacting patients Integration of technology and adequate resourcing Pairing of general practitioner with prior patient contact |