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      Effect of a triage-based e-mail system on clinic resource use and patient and physician satisfaction in primary care : A randomized controlled trial

      , , ,
      Journal of General Internal Medicine
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          E-mail communication between patients and their providers has diffused slowly in clinical practice. To address concerns about the use of this technology, we performed a randomized controlled trial of a triage-based e-mail system in primary care. DESIGN AND PATIENTS/PARTICIPANTS: Physicians in 2 university-affiliated primary care centers were randomized to a triage-based e-mail system promoted to their patients. E-mails from patients of intervention physicians were routed to a central account and parsed to the appropriate staff for response. Control group physicians and their patients did not have access to the system. We collected information on patient e-mail use, phone calls, and visit distribution by physician over the 10 months and performed physician and patient surveys to examine attitudes about communication. E-mail volume was greater for intervention versus control physicians (46 weekly e-mails per 100 scheduled visits vs 9 in the control group at the study midpoint; P <.01) but there were no between-group differences in phone volume (67 weekly phone calls per 100 scheduled visits vs 55 in the control group; P =.45) or rates of patient no-shows (5% in both groups; P =.77). Intervention physicians reported more favorable attitudes toward electronic communication than did control physicians but there were no differences in attitudes toward patient or staff communication in general. There were few between-group differences in patient attitudes toward electronic communication or communication in general. E-mail generated through a triage-based system did not appear to substitute for phone communication or to reduce visit no-shows in a primary care setting. Physicians' attitudes toward electronic communication were improved, but physicians' and patients' attitudes toward general communication did not change. Growth of e-mail communication in primary care settings may not improve the efficiency of clinical care.

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          A survey of patient-provider e-mail communication: what do patients think?

          Communication between patients and providers forms the backbone of the patient-provider relationship. Often such communication is strained due to time and space limitations on the part of both patients and providers. Many healthcare organizations are developing secure e-mail communication facilities to allow patients to exchange e-mail messages with their providers. Providers are worried that opening such lines of communication will inundate them with vast quantities of e-mail from their patients. Patients are worried that their messages will be intercepted and read by unauthorized people. In an attempt to determine how a group of internet-active, e-mail-ready patients currently use, or potentially view, the ability to exchange e-mail messages with their health care providers, we distributed a survey via e-mail to over 9500 patients. After determining each patient's e-mail activity level (based on the number of messages sent each day), we asked questions such as: "Have you ever sent e-mail to your provider?" "What issues or concerns have prevented you from sending e-mail messages to your provider?" "If your provider were to tell you that someone in his/her office may screen, read or perhaps reply to your message before he/she sees it, to what extent would you be concerned about this?" and "How would you rate your overall satisfaction with the use of e-mail to communicate with your provider?" Results from the survey indicate that nearly 85% of the patients surveyed send at least one e-mail message per day, but that very few (i.e. 6%) of the patients have actually sent an e-mail message to their provider. Interestingly, over half of the patients indicated that they would like to send their providers e-mail, but that they do not know their provider's e-mail address.
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            Patients, physicians, and the Internet

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              Limiting factors on the transformative powers of e-mail in patient-physician relationships: a critical analysis.

              C Baur (1999)
              In this article I analyze doctor-patient use of e-mail within the context of the evolving doctor-patient relationship and ongoing changes in the U.S. health care system. Evidence from the published literature on doctor-patient relationships and doctor-patient communication, empirical studies of uses of the Internet by doctors and patients, and commentaries about the Internet's role in health care are examined and discussed to reveal common, unsupported assumptions about the likely impact of e-mail on the doctor-patient relationship and also the value structure associated with current e-mail practices between doctors and patients. I argue that existing research does not adequately account for the technical, professional, and economic forces that are shaping doctor-patient use of e-mail. I conclude that physicians' preferences for technical, instrumental exchanges with patients will likely mitigate the positive influence that e-mail could have on the doctor-patient relationship, and doctor-patient communication is unlikely to improve as a result of their use of e-mail.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of General Internal Medicine
                J Gen Intern Med
                Wiley
                0884-8734
                1525-1497
                September 2003
                September 2003
                : 18
                : 9
                : 736-744
                Article
                10.1046/j.1525-1497.2003.20756.x
                1494914
                12950483
                8e6bf023-4ac2-4dd9-9c73-c54ed89b10a6
                © 2003
                History

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