Brown A, Armstrong D
Department of General Practice, United Medical and Dental Schools of Guy's and St Thomas' Hospitals, London.
Br J Gen Pract. 1995 Dec;45(401):673-5.
There is conflicting evidence about whether telephone consultations in general practice represent additional or alternative contacts with the general practitioner.
A study set out to assess the characteristics of patients using the telephone to consult the general practitioner and whether telephone consultations were used as an additional or an alternative service to surgery consultations during surgery hours.
The study took place in one practice that has run a 'phone-in clinic' for five years. A questionnaire on perceptions of and attitudes towards telephone consultations was sent to 259 patients who consulted the general practitioner by telephone and to an age-sex matched group of patients whose medical records indicated that they had never consulted the general practitioner by telephone. For both groups, numbers of repeat prescriptions and consultations in the preceding year were determined from medical records.
Those who consulted the doctor by telephone were significantly more likely to be aware of the phone-in clinic, to have a telephone at home, to have children aged under five years at home and to be receiving repeat prescriptions and repeat prescriptions for psychotropic drugs compared with those who had never consulted by telephone. Eleven of 226 patients who consulted be telephone (5%) indicated that they would definitely not have made a surgery appointment or home visit request (that is, they represented additional general practitioner workload) while 120 (53%) used the telephone consultation as an alternative to making a surgery appointment and 22 (10%) used the telephone consultation as an alternative to requesting a home visit.
It appears that the telephone service was being used largely as an alternative access point to the doctor. General practitioners should not be apprehensive about the possible increase in workload generated by introducing telephone consultations, for example in phone-in clinics.
关于全科医疗中的电话咨询是代表与全科医生的额外接触还是替代接触,证据存在冲突。
一项研究旨在评估使用电话咨询全科医生的患者特征,以及电话咨询在手术时间内是作为手术咨询的额外服务还是替代服务。
该研究在一家开展“电话问诊诊所”五年的医疗机构进行。一份关于对电话咨询的认知和态度的问卷被发送给259名通过电话咨询全科医生的患者,以及一组年龄和性别匹配、病历显示从未通过电话咨询过全科医生的患者。对于这两组患者,前一年的重复处方数量和咨询次数均从病历中确定。
与从未通过电话咨询过的患者相比,通过电话咨询医生的患者明显更有可能知晓电话问诊诊所、家中有电话、家中有五岁以下儿童,并且正在接受重复处方以及精神药物的重复处方。226名通过电话咨询的患者中有11名(5%)表示他们绝对不会预约手术或请求上门问诊(即,他们增加了全科医生的工作量),而120名(53%)将电话咨询用作预约手术的替代方式,22名(10%)将电话咨询用作请求上门问诊的替代方式。
看来电话服务在很大程度上被用作联系医生的替代途径。全科医生不应担心引入电话咨询(例如在电话问诊诊所)可能带来的工作量增加。