Experiences of digital communication with automated patient interviews and asynchronous chat in Swedish primary care: a qualitative study.

Abstract:

OBJECTIVES:To explore staff experiences of working with a digital communication platform implemented throughout several primary healthcare centres in Sweden. DESIGN:A descriptive qualitative approach using focus group interviews. Qualitative content analysis was used to code, categorise and thematise data. SETTING:Primary healthcare centres across Sweden, in both rural and urban settings. PARTICIPANTS:A total of three mixed focus groups, comprising 19 general practitioners and nurses with experience using a specific digital communication platform. RESULTS:Five categories emerged: 'Fears and Benefits of Digital Communication', 'Altered Practice Workflow', 'Accepting the Digital Society', 'Safe and Secure for Patients' and 'Doesn't Suit Everyone and Everything'. These were abstracted into two comprehensive themes: 'Adjusting to a novel medium of communication' and 'Digitally filtered primary care', describing how staff experienced integrating the software as a useful tool for certain clinical contexts while managing the communication challenges associated with written communication. CONCLUSIONS:Family medicine staff were ambivalent concerning the use of digital communication but, after a period of adjustment, it was seen as a useful communication tool especially when combined with continuity of care. Staff acknowledged limitations regarding use by inappropriate patient populations, information overload and misinterpretation of text by both staff and patients.

journal_name

BMJ Open

journal_title

BMJ open

authors

Entezarjou A,Bolmsjö BB,Calling S,Midlöv P,Milos Nymberg V

doi

10.1136/bmjopen-2019-036585

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2020-07-23 00:00:00

pages

e036585

issue

7

issn

2044-6055

pii

bmjopen-2019-036585

journal_volume

10

pub_type

杂志文章

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