| Literature DB >> 35564519 |
Maaike Meurs1, Jelle Keuper1,2, Valerie Sankatsing1, Ronald Batenburg1,3, Lilian van Tuyl1.
Abstract
The first outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic led to the introduction of the more extensive use of e-health in Dutch general practices. The objective of this study was to investigate the experiences of general practitioners (GPs) regarding this change. In addition, the necessary conditions for e-health technology to be of added value to general practices were explored. In April 2020, 30 GPs were recruited for in-depth interviews via a web survey which contained questions regarding the use of e-health during the first wave of the pandemic. While most GPs intend to keep using e-health applications more extensively than before the pandemic, the actual use of e-health depends on several factors, including the characteristics of the application's users. The following conditions for successful and sustainable implementation of e-health were identified: (1) integration of e-health technology in the organization of GP care, (2) sufficient user-friendliness of applications as well as digital skills of professionals and patients, and (3) adequate technological and financial support of e-health services. GPs clearly recognize the benefits of using e-health, and most GPs intend to keep using e-health applications more extensively than before the pandemic. However, improvements are needed to allow widespread and sustainable adoption of e-health technology in general practices.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; e-health; general practice
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35564519 PMCID: PMC9104344 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19095120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Interview results structured according to the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) domains, categorized by e-health application.
| Domains | E-Consultation | Online Ordering of Repeat Prescriptions | Video Consultations | Teleconsultations | Telemonitoring |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Most GP practices already made use of e-consultations before the COVID-19 pandemic | Most GP practices already made use of online services to request maintenance drugs before the COVID-19 pandemic | Most GPs experimented with the use of video consultations during the COVID-19 pandemic | Most GP practices already made use of e-consultations before the COVID-19 pandemic; only a few used it for the first time | GPs used telemonitoring more extensively due to the COVID-19 pandemic |
|
| Generally, relatively young patients, who have digital skills and who work during the day, but also some older patients | Some GPs perceive that young patients use it more extensively than older patients | Some GPs find it more suitable for young patients and patients with a higher obtained level of education, but most find it suitable for any patient with some technical skills (or with help) | Diverse | Patients that need regular blood pressure, glucose, or saturation monitoring and prefer not to come to the practice |
|
| Flexibility of GPs to respond at any moment that is suitable to them | It saves time for assistants as they do not receive the medication boxes or telephone calls | GPs obtain a better impression of how ill someone is by using video consultations (compared to telephone call or e-consultation) | Low key contact with specialists | Patients’ state is being objectivized and monitored without having to come to the practice (especially an advantage when patients are more vulnerable to infection and less mobile) |
|
| It can be inefficient when the questions go back and forth | Not many GPs report limitations | Practical limitations such as not having a camera | Teleconsultation is an extra consultation for the GP, which costs more time than direct referral to a specialist | Some patients prefer face-to-face measurements in order to feel a sense of control |
|
| Most GPs intend to keep using e-consultations more extensively also after the pandemic because (1) since the pandemic there is more (positive) experiences among patients and (2) because of the OPEN program for facilitating online access to medical patient files. | Most GPs expect that it will be extensively used by patients also after the pandemic because (1) more patients have access to the patient portal, (also used for e-consultations, making online appointments, accessing medical files), (2) patients are actively encouraged to use it, and (3) it saves them time | Use is reduced compared to the pandemic’s first peak, as GPs as well as patients still prefer face-to-face visits | Most GPs expect that teleconsultations will be as extensively used as during pandemic, or more extensively | Integration with the GPs’ systems |