初级保健中的非面对面咨询和沟通:苏格兰全科医生的角色和观点。

Lisa Hanna, Carl May, Karen Fairhurst
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引用次数: 29

摘要

背景:实践经理在初级保健的组织和交付中发挥着重要作用,包括吸收和实施技术。目前,人们对使用信息和通信技术(如电子邮件或短信)与患者沟通或咨询的实践管理人员的态度知之甚少。目的:调查实践管理者对初级保健日常交付中非面对面咨询/沟通技术的态度,以及他们在这些技术的引入和规范化中的作用。方法:我们在英国苏格兰进行了一项混合方法研究。我们邀请了苏格兰所有的执业经理人参加邮寄问卷调查。最大变异样本为20名调查对象随后参与了深入的定性访谈。结果:实践管理者支持在日常任务中使用新技术来管理工作量并最大限度地为患者提供便利,但一系列背景因素,如实践清单规模、实践剥夺面积和地理位置,会影响管理者是否会在不久的将来引入这些技术。最常见的反对意见是医疗法律方面的担忧和缺乏病人的需求。结论:实践管理者可能在全科实践中引入新的咨询/通信技术方面发挥核心作用。他们对这些技术的适当性持有不同的观点,受到一系列复杂的背景特征的影响。来自实践精神优先考虑个性化护理的领域的管理人员对采用远程咨询/通信技术的热情较低。
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Non-face-to-face consultations and communications in primary care: the role and perspective of general practice managers in Scotland.

Background: Practice managers play an important role in the organisation and delivery of primary care, including uptake and implementation of technologies. Little is currently known about practice managers' attitudes to the use of information and communication technologies, such as email or text messaging, to communicate or consult with patients.

Objectives: To investigate practice managers' attitudes to non-face-to-face consultation/communication technologies in the routine delivery of primary care and their role in the introduction and normalisation of these technologies.

Methods: We carried out a mixed-methods study in Scotland, UK. We invited all practice managers in Scotland to take part in a postal questionnaire survey. A maximum variation sample of 20 survey respondents participated subsequently in in-depth qualitative interviews.

Results: Practice managers supported the use of new technologies for routine tasks to manage workload and maximise convenience for patients, but a range of contextual factors such as practice list size, practice deprivation area and geographical location affected whether managers would pursue the introduction of these technologies in the immediate future. The most common objections were medico-legal concerns and lack of perceived patient demand.

Conclusion: Practice managers are likely to play a central role in the introduction of new consultation/communication technologies within general practice. They hold varying views on the appropriateness of these technologies, influenced by a complex mix of contextual characteristics. Managers from areas in which the ethos of the practice prioritises personalised care in service delivery are less enthusiastic about the adoption of remote consultation/communication technologies.

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