Literature by the same author
plus at Google Scholar

Bibliografische Daten exportieren
 

The potential of digital practice-patient communication in outpatient medical care settings : results from a quantitative web-based survey

Title data

Burkard, Michael ; Emmert, Martin:
The potential of digital practice-patient communication in outpatient medical care settings : results from a quantitative web-based survey.
2024
Event: 23rd German Congress for Health Services Research (DKVF) , 25.-27.09.2024 , Potsdam.
(Conference item: Conference , Poster )
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3205/24dkvf090

Official URL: Volltext

Project information

Project title:
Project's official title
Project's id
Ecosystem-Based Mixed Methods Study to Identify Opportunities for Digitally Enabled Care in Outpatient Health Care Delivery Settings (EMIDOC)
No information

Project financing: Andere
Industry Funding (medatixx GmbH & Co. KG)

Abstract in another language

Background: The shortage of skilled workers and the demographic change among both patients and healthcare professionals have caused an increasing workload in outpatient medical practices. These trends are contributing to healthcare professionals burning out and the quality of outpatient medical care being at risk. Medical practice staff craves support, especially with communication-related processes. Digital solutions for practice-patient communication (PPC) may potentially help to relieve practice staff and maintain or even optimize medical quality. Despite the rising multiplicity of digital health applications, digital PPC solutions have not yet been sufficiently assessed in the context of German outpatient medical care.

Objective: This study aimed to survey the communication between German outpatient medical and psychotherapy practices and their patients. Since practice owners and senior healthcare professionals play a pivotal role in the implementation of innovative technologies, the focus was on determining preferences of outpatient physicians and psychotherapists regarding both future analog and particularly digital communication channels and potential use cases.

Methods: We designed a quantitative, web-based survey to determine the mentioned preferences of German outpatient physicians and psychotherapists. For data collection, we used multiple choice and 5-point Likert scale questions. Convenience and snowball sampling methods were applied to recruit our target group. The survey was carried out in Germany in September/ October 2023. The questionnaires have been analyzed by applying descriptive and explorative methods. The CHERRIES-Checklist guided both the development of the questionnaire and the presentation of the results.

Results: Our web-based survey with 245 respondents revealed that the overall openness towards digital PPC solutions is relatively high (mean 4.29, SD 0.84). In contrast, more than 2/3 of respondents indicate that digital PPC solutions could be used for at most 60% of their current patient base. We found substantial differences regarding medical specialist groups; for example, psychotherapists reported a higher potential for digital PPC solutions (mean 3.18, SD 1.33), compared to the total sample (mean 2.77, SD 1.14). This difference is particularly large when it comes to the application of video consultations; here, 88.9% of participating psychotherapists would like to use this technology, compared to 43.3% overall. In general, the possible benefit of using digital PPC solutions has been rated positively, especially for reducing the burden on non-medical staff in general practitioner practices (ca. 70%). Overall, the most frequently expected risks of using digital PPC solutions are high implementation effort (62%) and data misuse (ca. 61%).

Implication for research and healthcare practice: Our study highlights the need of outpatient physicians and psychotherapists, particularly in relieving both medical and non-medical personnel capacity, and the general openness to the use of digital PPC solutions. By identifying these preferences, our findings support the development and implementation of digital PPC solutions specifically tailored to the heterogenous needs of the variety of medical specialist groups in German outpatient medical care settings. Therefore, user-centered approaches may have a positive impact on technology adoption and sustainable

Further data

Item Type: Conference item (Poster)
Refereed: Yes
Keywords: Practice-Patient Communication; Digital Health Solutions; Outpatient Medical Care
Institutions of the University: Faculties > Faculty of Law, Business and Economics > Chair Healthcare Management and Research
Faculties > Faculty of Law, Business and Economics > Professur Qualitätsmanagement, Gesundheitsökonomie und Präferenzforschung in der Onkologie
Result of work at the UBT: Yes
DDC Subjects: 000 Computer Science, information, general works > 004 Computer science
300 Social sciences > 330 Economics
600 Technology, medicine, applied sciences > 610 Medicine and health
Date Deposited: 19 Sep 2024 06:57
Last Modified: 19 Sep 2024 06:57
URI: https://eref.uni-bayreuth.de/id/eprint/90422