Thakurdas P, Coster G, Gurr E, Arroll B
Department of General Practice, Faculty of Medicine and Health Science, University of Auckland.
N Z Med J. 1996 Nov 8;109(1033):419-22.
To gather information from general practitioners regarding aspects of computerisation including whether certain tasks should be computerised and whether those tasks were in fact computerised at their practice.
Five hundred general practitioners randomly selected throughout New Zealand were sent a postal survey in May 1995. Results were then collated and analysed.
The response rate was 54% (268). Computerisation is becoming a necessity according to 85% of responders and a computer was used for at least one task by 84% of doctors. Computer use during consultation interfered unduly with doctor-patient communication according to 43% of responders. Privacy issues had not been dealt with adequately for 33% of responders. The five most frequently computerised tasks were; maintaining an age-sex register (81% of responders), recalls (80%), administration (77%), making appointments (50%) and word processing (49%). The number of doctors in a practice and responders' RNZCGP membership status appeared predictive of task computerisation. Responders' gender, year of graduation and their membership on the Indicative General Practitioners Register were not statistically significant factors for determining attitudinal and behavioural responses.
The low response rate limits generalisation but the trends in the results are important. Reported tasks with greatest potential for computerisation were doctor education; checking drug interactions/contraindications; patient education; tasks relating to interfacing with laboratories; and database enquires of patients. Significant concerns among responders were perceived interference with doctor patient communication and privacy issues. Eighty-four percent of responders use the computer for at least one task.
收集全科医生关于计算机化方面的信息,包括某些任务是否应进行计算机化以及这些任务在他们的诊所是否实际实现了计算机化。
1995年5月,向在新西兰随机挑选的500名全科医生发送了一份邮寄调查问卷。然后对结果进行整理和分析。
回复率为54%(268人)。85%的回复者认为计算机化正变得必要,84%的医生至少将计算机用于一项任务。43%的回复者认为会诊期间使用计算机过度干扰了医患沟通。33%的回复者认为隐私问题未得到充分处理。最常实现计算机化的五项任务是:维护年龄性别登记册(81%的回复者)、召回(80%)、行政管理(77%)、预约(50%)和文字处理(49%)。诊所医生数量和回复者的新西兰皇家全科医生学院会员身份似乎可预测任务的计算机化情况。回复者的性别、毕业年份及其在指示性全科医生登记册上的会员身份并非决定态度和行为反应的统计学显著因素。
低回复率限制了结果的普遍性,但结果中的趋势很重要。报告中计算机化潜力最大的任务是医生教育;检查药物相互作用/禁忌;患者教育;与实验室对接的任务;以及患者数据库查询。回复者的重大担忧是对医患沟通的干扰和隐私问题。84%的回复者至少将计算机用于一项任务。