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Multicenter Study
. 2016 Jul;66(648):e460-6.
doi: 10.3399/bjgp16X685597. Epub 2016 May 23.

Using alternatives to face-to-face consultations: a survey of prevalence and attitudes in general practice

Multicenter Study

Using alternatives to face-to-face consultations: a survey of prevalence and attitudes in general practice

Heather Brant et al. Br J Gen Pract. 2016 Jul.

Abstract

Background: The ubiquitous use of communication technologies has led to an expectation that a similar approach should extend to health care. Despite considerable rhetoric about the need for general practices to offer alternatives to face-to-face consultations, such as telephone, email, and internet video consultations, the extent to which such technologies are actually used at present is unclear.

Aim: The aim of the survey was to identify the frequency and range of ways in which general practices are providing (or planning) alternatives to face-to-face consultations.

Design and setting: A postal survey of practices around Bristol, Oxford, Lothian, the Highlands, and the Western Isles of Scotland.

Method: A postal questionnaire survey was sent to each of the GPs and practice managers of 421 practices between January and May 2015.

Results: A response was received from 319/421 practices (76%). Although the majority of the practices reported that they were conducting telephone consultations frequently (n = 211/318, 66%), fewer were implementing email consultations (n = 18/318, 6%), and most (n = 169/318, 53%) had no plans to introduce this. None were currently using internet video, and 86% (n = 273/318) had no plans to introduce internet video consultations. These findings were repeated in the reported use of alternatives to face-to-face consultations at an individual GP level. Optional free text responses were completed by 28% of responders, and offered an explanation for the (often perceived) barriers and incentives for implementation.

Conclusion: Despite policy pressure to introduce consultations by email and internet video, there is a general reluctance among GPs to implement alternatives to face-to-face consultations. This identifies a substantial gap between rhetoric and reality in terms of the likelihood of certain alternatives (email, video) changing practice in the near future.

Keywords: electronic mail; primary health care; referral and consultation; telephone; videoconferencing.

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Figures

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Postal questionnaire sent to practice managers, GP partners, and salaried GPs.

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