Humphrey Ada, Cummins Steven, May Carl, Stevenson Fiona
The London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM), London, UK
Imperial College London, London, UK.
BJGP Open. 2025 Apr 24;9(1). doi: 10.3399/BJGPO.2024.0050. Print 2025 Apr.
Since the COVID-19 pandemic, there has been an increase in the use of remote consultations in general practice in the UK. This leads to the displacement of the consultation outside of the physical general practice, and its 'emplacement' elsewhere, with underexplored consequences for inequities of health care in marginalised groups.
To examine the place-making demands that remote consultations make on patients, and the ways that these affect their experiences of care, with a focus on the impact on patients from marginalised groups.
DESIGN & SETTING: Ethnography and interview study ( = 15) undertaken at three fieldwork sites in London: a foodbank, a community development organisation, and a drop-in advice centre for migrants. Additionally, GPs ( = 5) working at practices in deprived areas of London, Digital Health Hub staff ( = 4), and staff at fieldwork sites ( = 3) were interviewed.
Ethnographic observation was undertaken for 84 hours at the fieldwork site services, and semi-structured interviews ( = 27) took place with service users and service providers. Interviews were conducted in-person and over the phone, and data were analysed through reflexive thematic analysis.
The core themes emerging from the data included challenges securing privacy during remote consultations and the loss of formal healthcare spaces as important places of care. These findings were closely tied to resource access, leading to inequities in experiences of care.
Remote GP consultations are not 'place-less' encounters, and inequities in access to suitable spaces may lead to inequities in experiences of care. Attention should be given to ensuring that patients without appropriate spaces for remote consultations are offered in-person care, or consultation times made more specific to allow for organisation of private space.
自新冠疫情以来,英国全科医疗中远程会诊的使用有所增加。这导致会诊从实体全科医疗场所转移到其他地方进行“安置”,而其对边缘化群体医疗保健公平性的影响尚未得到充分探讨。
研究远程会诊对患者提出的场所营造要求,以及这些要求影响他们就医体验的方式,重点关注对边缘化群体患者的影响。
在伦敦的三个实地考察地点进行人种志和访谈研究( = 15):一个食品银行、一个社区发展组织和一个移民临时咨询中心。此外,还采访了在伦敦贫困地区执业的全科医生( = 5)、数字健康中心工作人员( = 4)以及实地考察地点的工作人员( = 3)。
在实地考察地点的服务中进行了84小时的人种志观察,并与服务使用者和服务提供者进行了半结构化访谈( = 27)。访谈通过面对面和电话进行,数据通过反思性主题分析进行分析。
数据中出现的核心主题包括在远程会诊期间确保隐私的挑战,以及失去作为重要护理场所的正规医疗空间。这些发现与资源获取密切相关,导致就医体验的不平等。
远程全科医生会诊并非“无场所”的接触,获得合适空间的不平等可能导致就医体验的不平等。应注意确保为没有合适远程会诊空间的患者提供面对面护理,或使会诊时间更具针对性,以便安排私人空间。