
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode we talk to Professor Jeremy Horwood who is a professor of social sciences and applied health research at NIHR ARC West, and the Centre for Academic Primary Care, at the University of Bristol.
Paper: Unintended consequences of online consultations: a qualitative study in UK primary care
https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2021.0426
Previous studies have shown that online consultations may be best for straightforward transactions such as simple and administrative queries, but do not necessarily deliver improvements in access to care or practice efficiency. This qualitative study identified unintended consequences of a range of online consultation tools that negatively impacted patients’ ability to communicate effectively with a GP, access to care, practice workload, and staff satisfaction. These consequences were often operational challenges that could be foreseen and prevented; however, the tools also had consequences that favoured simple, remote transactions and a shift away from holistic face-to-face care.
By The British Journal of General PracticeIn this episode we talk to Professor Jeremy Horwood who is a professor of social sciences and applied health research at NIHR ARC West, and the Centre for Academic Primary Care, at the University of Bristol.
Paper: Unintended consequences of online consultations: a qualitative study in UK primary care
https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2021.0426
Previous studies have shown that online consultations may be best for straightforward transactions such as simple and administrative queries, but do not necessarily deliver improvements in access to care or practice efficiency. This qualitative study identified unintended consequences of a range of online consultation tools that negatively impacted patients’ ability to communicate effectively with a GP, access to care, practice workload, and staff satisfaction. These consequences were often operational challenges that could be foreseen and prevented; however, the tools also had consequences that favoured simple, remote transactions and a shift away from holistic face-to-face care.

36 Listeners

3,749 Listeners

5 Listeners

1 Listeners

6 Listeners

996 Listeners

51 Listeners

245 Listeners

10 Listeners

7 Listeners

3 Listeners

3,023 Listeners

179 Listeners

97 Listeners

5 Listeners