Jennifer Newbould, Lucy Hocking, Manbinder Sidhu, Kelly Daniel
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There is little evidence of staff experiences of using Digital First Primary Care with more complex patients, such as those with multiple long-term conditions.</p><p><strong>Objective: </strong>To understand the experiences of those with multiple long-term conditions of Digital First Primary Care from the perspectives of healthcare professionals and stakeholders.</p><p><strong>Design: </strong>This was a qualitative evaluation, comprised of four distinct work packages: Work package 1: Locating the study within the wider context, engaging with literature, and co-designing the study approach and research questions with patients. Work package 2: Interviews with health professionals working across general practice and key expert topic stakeholders, including academics and policy-makers. Work package 3: Analysis of data and generation of themes, and testing findings with patients. Work package 4: Synthesis, reporting and dissemination.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>The study commenced in January 2021 and in total 28 interviews were conducted with 14 health professionals and 15 stakeholders between January and August 2022. From the perspective of health professionals, Digital First Primary Care approaches could enable patients to speak with a clinician more quickly than traditional approaches. Those with multiple long-term conditions could submit healthcare readings from home, though health professionals felt patients may struggle navigating digital systems not designed to capture the nuances associated with living with multiple conditions. Clinicians expressed preferences for seeing patients face-to-face, particularly those with multiple long-term conditions, to identify non-verbal cues about a patient's health. Digital First Primary Care approaches provided an opportunity for clinicians to engage with the carers of patients living with multiple long-term conditions, yet there were concerns around obtaining consent and confidentiality. There remain debates among stakeholders about the nature and extent to which Digital First Primary Care impacts on staff workload.</p><p><strong>Limitations: </strong>At the time of data collection, general practices were facing considerable pressure to deliver care and respond to the COVID-19 pandemic. While it was originally intended that the study would include interviews with patients with multiple long-term conditions and their carers, none of the general practices that took part in the study were willing and/or able to recruit patients and carers in the time available.</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>The rapid implementation of Digital First Primary Care, at a time of immense pressures, meant there has been little time for considering the impact on patients, including those with multiple long-term conditions. The impacts on care continuity depended largely on how surgeries implemented their approaches. Staff and stakeholders felt that Digital First Primary Care, as an additional route for accessing primary care, could be useful for patients with multiple long-term conditions but not at the expense of face-to-face consultations.</p><p><strong>Future work: </strong>Future research obtaining patient and carer views of digital-first approaches, understanding the impacts on carers and how approaches are designed with patients with more complex conditions in mind, is essential.</p><p><strong>Funding: </strong>This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme (NIHR award ref: 16/138/31) and is published in full in <i>Health and Social Care Delivery Research</i>; Vol. 12, No. 21. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.</p>","PeriodicalId":519880,"journal":{"name":"Health and social care delivery research","volume":"12 21","pages":"1-68"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Digital First Primary Care for those with multiple long-term conditions: a rapid review of the views of stakeholders.\",\"authors\":\"Jennifer Newbould, Lucy Hocking, Manbinder Sidhu, Kelly Daniel\",\"doi\":\"10.3310/AWBT4827\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><strong>Background: </strong>General practices are facing challenges such as rising patient demand and difficulties recruiting and retaining general practitioners. Greater use of digital technology has been advocated as a way of mitigating some of these challenges and improving patient access. This includes Digital First Primary Care, when a patient's first contact with primary care is through a digital route, either through a laptop or smartphone. The use of Digital First Primary Care has been expedited since COVID-19. There is little evidence of staff experiences of using Digital First Primary Care with more complex patients, such as those with multiple long-term conditions.</p><p><strong>Objective: </strong>To understand the experiences of those with multiple long-term conditions of Digital First Primary Care from the perspectives of healthcare professionals and stakeholders.</p><p><strong>Design: </strong>This was a qualitative evaluation, comprised of four distinct work packages: Work package 1: Locating the study within the wider context, engaging with literature, and co-designing the study approach and research questions with patients. Work package 2: Interviews with health professionals working across general practice and key expert topic stakeholders, including academics and policy-makers. Work package 3: Analysis of data and generation of themes, and testing findings with patients. Work package 4: Synthesis, reporting and dissemination.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>The study commenced in January 2021 and in total 28 interviews were conducted with 14 health professionals and 15 stakeholders between January and August 2022. From the perspective of health professionals, Digital First Primary Care approaches could enable patients to speak with a clinician more quickly than traditional approaches. Those with multiple long-term conditions could submit healthcare readings from home, though health professionals felt patients may struggle navigating digital systems not designed to capture the nuances associated with living with multiple conditions. Clinicians expressed preferences for seeing patients face-to-face, particularly those with multiple long-term conditions, to identify non-verbal cues about a patient's health. Digital First Primary Care approaches provided an opportunity for clinicians to engage with the carers of patients living with multiple long-term conditions, yet there were concerns around obtaining consent and confidentiality. There remain debates among stakeholders about the nature and extent to which Digital First Primary Care impacts on staff workload.</p><p><strong>Limitations: </strong>At the time of data collection, general practices were facing considerable pressure to deliver care and respond to the COVID-19 pandemic. While it was originally intended that the study would include interviews with patients with multiple long-term conditions and their carers, none of the general practices that took part in the study were willing and/or able to recruit patients and carers in the time available.</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>The rapid implementation of Digital First Primary Care, at a time of immense pressures, meant there has been little time for considering the impact on patients, including those with multiple long-term conditions. The impacts on care continuity depended largely on how surgeries implemented their approaches. Staff and stakeholders felt that Digital First Primary Care, as an additional route for accessing primary care, could be useful for patients with multiple long-term conditions but not at the expense of face-to-face consultations.</p><p><strong>Future work: </strong>Future research obtaining patient and carer views of digital-first approaches, understanding the impacts on carers and how approaches are designed with patients with more complex conditions in mind, is essential.</p><p><strong>Funding: </strong>This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme (NIHR award ref: 16/138/31) and is published in full in <i>Health and Social Care Delivery Research</i>; Vol. 12, No. 21. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景:全科诊所正面临着各种挑战,如患者需求不断增加、难以招聘和留住全科医生等。人们提倡更多地使用数字技术,以此来缓解其中的一些挑战,并改善患者就医情况。这包括 "数字第一初级医疗",即病人通过笔记本电脑或智能手机等数字途径首次接触初级医疗。自 COVID-19 以来,"数字第一初级医疗 "的使用已经加快。目前几乎没有证据表明,员工在对病情较为复杂的患者(如患有多种长期疾病的患者)使用 "数字首诊 "初级医疗服务时有什么经验:从医疗保健专业人员和利益相关者的角度了解患有多种长期疾病的患者使用 "数字化第一初级医疗 "的体验:这是一项定性评估,由四个不同的工作包组成:工作包 1:工作包 1:将研究置于更广阔的背景中,参考文献,与患者共同设计研究方法和研究问题。工作包 2:采访从事全科工作的医疗专业人员和关键的专家主题利益相关者,包括学者和政策制定者。工作包 3:分析数据和生成主题,并与患者共同检验研究结果。工作包 4:综合、报告和传播:研究于 2021 年 1 月开始,在 2022 年 1 月至 8 月期间,共对 14 名医疗专业人员和 15 名利益相关者进行了 28 次访谈。从医疗专业人员的角度来看,与传统方法相比,"数字第一初级医疗 "方法能让患者更快地与临床医生交谈。有多种长期病症的患者可以在家提交医疗保健读数,但医疗专业人员认为,患者在浏览数字系统时可能会感到吃力,因为数字系统的设计无法捕捉与多种病症相关的细微差别。临床医生表示,他们更愿意面对面地看病,尤其是那些患有多种长期疾病的患者,以便识别有关患者健康的非语言线索。数字第一初级保健 "方法为临床医生提供了一个与患有多种长期疾病的患者的护理者接触的机会,但在获得同意和保密性方面仍存在顾虑。利益相关者对 "数字化第一初级保健 "对员工工作量的影响性质和程度仍存在争议:在收集数据时,全科诊所正面临着提供医疗服务和应对 COVID-19 大流行的巨大压力。虽然研究的初衷是包括对患有多种长期疾病的患者及其护理人员进行访谈,但参与研究的普通诊所都不愿意和/或能够在规定时间内招募到患者和护理人员:结论:在压力巨大的情况下,"数字第一初级医疗 "的快速实施意味着几乎没有时间考虑对患者(包括患有多种长期疾病的患者)的影响。对护理连续性的影响在很大程度上取决于诊所如何实施其方法。工作人员和利益相关者认为,"数字第一初级医疗 "作为获取初级医疗服务的额外途径,对患有多种长期疾病的患者可能有用,但不能以牺牲面对面咨询为代价:未来的工作:未来的研究必须获得患者和护理人员对数字优先方法的看法,了解对护理人员的影响,以及如何在设计方法时考虑到病情更复杂的患者:该奖项由英国国家健康与护理研究所(NIHR)的健康与社会护理服务研究计划(NIHR award ref:16/138/31)资助,全文发表于《健康与社会护理服务研究》(Health and Social Care Delivery Research)第12卷第21期。如需了解更多奖项信息,请访问 NIHR Funding and Awards 网站。
Digital First Primary Care for those with multiple long-term conditions: a rapid review of the views of stakeholders.
Background: General practices are facing challenges such as rising patient demand and difficulties recruiting and retaining general practitioners. Greater use of digital technology has been advocated as a way of mitigating some of these challenges and improving patient access. This includes Digital First Primary Care, when a patient's first contact with primary care is through a digital route, either through a laptop or smartphone. The use of Digital First Primary Care has been expedited since COVID-19. There is little evidence of staff experiences of using Digital First Primary Care with more complex patients, such as those with multiple long-term conditions.
Objective: To understand the experiences of those with multiple long-term conditions of Digital First Primary Care from the perspectives of healthcare professionals and stakeholders.
Design: This was a qualitative evaluation, comprised of four distinct work packages: Work package 1: Locating the study within the wider context, engaging with literature, and co-designing the study approach and research questions with patients. Work package 2: Interviews with health professionals working across general practice and key expert topic stakeholders, including academics and policy-makers. Work package 3: Analysis of data and generation of themes, and testing findings with patients. Work package 4: Synthesis, reporting and dissemination.
Results: The study commenced in January 2021 and in total 28 interviews were conducted with 14 health professionals and 15 stakeholders between January and August 2022. From the perspective of health professionals, Digital First Primary Care approaches could enable patients to speak with a clinician more quickly than traditional approaches. Those with multiple long-term conditions could submit healthcare readings from home, though health professionals felt patients may struggle navigating digital systems not designed to capture the nuances associated with living with multiple conditions. Clinicians expressed preferences for seeing patients face-to-face, particularly those with multiple long-term conditions, to identify non-verbal cues about a patient's health. Digital First Primary Care approaches provided an opportunity for clinicians to engage with the carers of patients living with multiple long-term conditions, yet there were concerns around obtaining consent and confidentiality. There remain debates among stakeholders about the nature and extent to which Digital First Primary Care impacts on staff workload.
Limitations: At the time of data collection, general practices were facing considerable pressure to deliver care and respond to the COVID-19 pandemic. While it was originally intended that the study would include interviews with patients with multiple long-term conditions and their carers, none of the general practices that took part in the study were willing and/or able to recruit patients and carers in the time available.
Conclusions: The rapid implementation of Digital First Primary Care, at a time of immense pressures, meant there has been little time for considering the impact on patients, including those with multiple long-term conditions. The impacts on care continuity depended largely on how surgeries implemented their approaches. Staff and stakeholders felt that Digital First Primary Care, as an additional route for accessing primary care, could be useful for patients with multiple long-term conditions but not at the expense of face-to-face consultations.
Future work: Future research obtaining patient and carer views of digital-first approaches, understanding the impacts on carers and how approaches are designed with patients with more complex conditions in mind, is essential.
Funding: This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme (NIHR award ref: 16/138/31) and is published in full in Health and Social Care Delivery Research; Vol. 12, No. 21. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.