The potential of alternatives to face-to-face consultation in general practice, and the impact on different patient groups: a mixed-methods case study
- PMID: 29889485
- Bookshelf ID: NBK507060
- DOI: 10.3310/hsdr06200
The potential of alternatives to face-to-face consultation in general practice, and the impact on different patient groups: a mixed-methods case study
Excerpt
Background: There is international interest in the potential role of different forms of communication technology to provide an alternative to face-to-face consultations in health care. There has been considerable rhetoric about the need for general practices to offer consultations by telephone, e-mail or internet video. However, little is understood about how, under what conditions, for which patients and in what ways these approaches may offer benefits to patients and practitioners in general practice.
Objectives: Our objectives were to review existing evidence about alternatives to face-to-face consultation; conduct a scoping exercise to identify the ways in which general practices currently provide these alternatives; recruit eight general practices as case studies for focused ethnographic research, exploring how practice context, patient characteristics, type of technology and the purpose of the consultation interact to determine the impact of these alternatives; and synthesise the findings in order to develop a website resource about the implementation of alternatives to face-to-face consultations and a framework for subsequent evaluation.
Design: Mixed-methods case study.
Setting: General practices in England and Scotland with varied experience of implementing alternatives to face-to-face consultations.
Participants: Patients and practice staff.
Interventions: Alternatives to face-to-face consultations include telephone consultations, e-mail, e-consultations and internet video.
Main outcome measures: How context influenced the implementation and impact of alternatives to the face-to-face consultation; the rationale for practices to introduce alternatives; the use of different forms of consultation by different patient groups; and the intended benefits/outcomes.
Review methods: The conceptual review used an approach informed by realist review, a method for synthesising research evidence regarding complex interventions.
Results: Alternatives to the face-to-face consultation are not in mainstream use in general practice, with low uptake in our case study practices. We identified the underlying rationales for the use of these alternatives and have shown that different stakeholders have different perspectives on what they hope to achieve through the use of alternatives to the face-to-face consultation. Through the observation of real-life use of different forms of alternative, we have a clearer understanding of how, under what circumstances and for which patients alternatives might have a range of intended benefits and potential unintended adverse consequences. We have also developed a framework for future evaluation.
Limitations: The low uptake of alternatives to the face-to-face consultation means that our research participants might be deemed to be early adopters. The case study approach provides an in-depth examination of a small number of sites, each using alternatives in different ways. The findings are therefore hypothesis-generating, rather than hypothesis-testing.
Conclusions: The current low uptake of alternatives, lack of clarity about purpose and limited evidence of benefit may be at odds with current policy, which encourages the use of alternatives. We have highlighted key issues for practices and policy-makers to consider and have made recommendations about priorities for further research to be conducted, before or alongside the future roll-out of alternatives to the face-to-face consultation, such as telephone consulting, e-consultation, e-mail and video consulting.
Future work: We have synthesised our findings to develop a framework and recommendations about future evaluation of the use of alternatives to face-to-face consultations.
Funding details: The National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery Research programme.
Copyright © Queen’s Printer and Controller of HMSO 2018. This work was produced by Atherton et al. under the terms of a commissioning contract issued by the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care. This issue may be freely reproduced for the purposes of private research and study and extracts (or indeed, the full report) may be included in professional journals provided that suitable acknowledgement is made and the reproduction is not associated with any form of advertising. Applications for commercial reproduction should be addressed to: NIHR Journals Library, National Institute for Health Research, Evaluation, Trials and Studies Coordinating Centre, Alpha House, University of Southampton Science Park, Southampton SO16 7NS, UK.
Sections
- Plain English summary
- Scientific summary
- Chapter 1. Introduction
- Chapter 2. Conceptual review
- Chapter 3. Scoping study
- Chapter 4. Focused ethnographic case studies, methodology and description of sites
- Chapter 5. Case study results
- Chapter 6. Collection and analysis of routine consultation data
- Chapter 7. Synthesis and framework for future evaluation
- Chapter 8. Discussion
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Appendix 1. Search strategies used in the conceptual review
- Appendix 2. Matrix template for the conceptual review
- Appendix 3. Conceptual review: list of relevant articles identified in the search
- Appendix 4. Case study guide
- Appendix 5. Topic guides for semistructured interviews
- Appendix 6. Description of the case study practices
- Appendix 7. Staff interview participant characteristics
- Appendix 8. Patient interview participant characteristics
- Appendix 9. Issues related to the recording of consultations in routine general practice computer systems
- Appendix 10. Data collection sheet to assess the reliability of recording of alternative consultation types
- Appendix 11. Clusters of diseases used to create a multimorbidity score
- Appendix 12. Recoding the consultation type in each case study practice
- Appendix 13. Recoding professional type in each case study practice
- Appendix 14. Demographic details of patients by practice
- Appendix 15. Prevalence of conditions in study practices and nationally
- Appendix 16. Prevalence of conditions by practice: patients aged ≥ 18 years
- Appendix 17. Proportion of patients with multimorbidities in different age groups (aged ≥ 18 years)
- Appendix 18. Consultation rates (all practices) by type of consultation and type of professional
- Appendix 19. Rates of different types of consultation by age group, sex, deprivation, ethnicity and multimorbidity
- Appendix 20. Rates of different types of consultation by number of morbidities: natural units and logarithmic scale
- Appendix 21. Consultations and reconsultations with general practitioner only
- Appendix 22. An outline of the structure of the web resource
- List of abbreviations
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