Effectieve triage mogelijk per e-mail
Bibliotheek (Redactie Bibliotheek) donderdag 1 januari 2009, 11:57- Huisartsen (en HAP) |
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White CB, Moyer CA, Stern DT, Katz SJ. A content analysis of e-mail communication between patients and their providers: patients get the message. J Am Med Inform Assoc 2004 Jul;11(4):260-7.
E-mail gebruik in de klinische setting is verspreid zich maar langzaam om verschillende redenen, waaronder de bezorgdheid van aanbieders over het ongepast en inefficiënt gebruik van de technologie door patiënten. Deze studie onderzocht de inhoud van een aselecte steekproef van patiënt-arts e-mailberichten naar de geldigheid van deze bezorgdheid
OBJECTIVE: E-mail use in the clinical setting has been slow to diffuse for several reasons, including providers' concerns about patients' inappropriate and inefficient use of the technology. This study examined the content of a random sample of patient-physician e-mail messages to determine the validity of those concerns. DESIGN: A qualitative analysis of patient-physician e-mail messages was performed. MEASUREMENTS: A total of 3,007 patient-physician e-mail messages were collected over 11 months as part of a randomized, controlled trial of a triage-based e-mail system in two primary care centers (including 98 physicians); 10% of messages were randomly selected for review. Messages were coded across such domains as message type, number of requests per e-mail, inclusion of sensitive content, necessity of a physician response, and message tone. RESULTS: The majority (82.8%) of messages addressed a single issue. The most common message types included information updates to the physicians (41.4%), prescription renewals (24.2%), health questions (13.2%), questions about test results (10.9%), referrals (8.8%), "other" (including thank yous, apologies) (8.8%), appointments (5.4%), requests for non-health-related information (4.8%), and billing questions (0.3%). Overall, messages were concise, formal, and medically relevant. Very few (5.1%) included sensitive content, and none included urgent messages. Less than half (43.2%) required a physician response. CONCLUSION: A triage-based e-mail system promoted e-mail exchanges appropriate for primary care. Most patients adhered to guidelines aimed at focusing content, limiting the number of requests per message, and avoiding urgent requests or highly sensitive content. Thus, physicians' concerns about the content of patients' e-mails may be unwarranted
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