AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of implementing an e-communications system between patients and a rural primary care clinic in Ontario, Canada.
  • Patients showed interest in using email for various medical tasks like prescription refills and appointment scheduling, while clinic staff expressed concerns about privacy, data security, and increased workload.
  • Successful adoption of the system would require clear guidelines to ensure patient confidentiality and could potentially enhance access to healthcare services in rural areas.

Article Abstract

Unlabelled: Aim To conduct an environmental scan of a rural primary care clinic to assess the feasibility of implementing an e-communications system between patients and clinic staff.

Background: Increasing demands on healthcare require greater efficiencies in communications and services, particularly in rural areas. E-communications may improve clinic efficiency and delivery of healthcare but raises concerns about patient privacy and data security.

Methods: We conducted an environmental scan at one family health team clinic, a high-volume interdisciplinary primary care practice in rural southwestern Ontario, Canada, to determine the feasibility of implementing an e-communications system between its patients and staff. A total of 28 qualitative interviews were conducted (with six physicians, four phone nurses, four physicians' nurses, five receptionists, one business office attendant, five patients, and three pharmacists who provide care to the clinic's patients) along with quantitative surveys of 131 clinic patients. Findings Patients reported using the internet regularly for multiple purposes. Patients indicated they would use email to communicate with their family doctor for prescription refills (65% of respondents), appointment booking (63%), obtaining lab results (60%), and education (50%). Clinic staff expressed concerns about patient confidentiality and data security, the timeliness, complexity and responsibility of responses, and increased workload.

Conclusion: Clinic staff members are willing to use an e-communications system but clear guidelines are needed for successful adoption and to maintain privacy of patient health data. E-communications might improve access to and quality of care in rural primary care practices.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1463423616000414DOI Listing

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