Patient Experiences With Telemedicine in a National Health Service Rheumatology Outpatient Department During Coronavirus Disease-19
Affiliation
University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust; Worcestershire Royal HospitalPublication date
2021-08-19Subject
Health services. ManagementPatients. Primary care. Medical profession. Forensic medicine
Public health. Health statistics. Occupational health. Health education
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Show full item recordAbstract
The coronavirus disease-19 pandemic changed rheumatology practice with remote consultations being increasingly utilized where appropriate. We evaluated patient experiences with telephone consultations and report on patient attitudes toward current health care delivery and perspectives of telemedicine in a UK National Health Service rheumatology outpatient department. We analyzed 297 questionnaires from a postal survey conducted during the summer of 2020 after a telephone follow-up consultation. The mean age of respondents was 67 years and 68% were female. The 161 respondents (54%) reported it was their first telephone consultation and overall, 239 (84%) were satisfied with their health assessment. 60% would be happy to have future routine follow-up telephone consultations. Patients advised to shield shared similar satisfaction to the whole sample. However, with increasing age we identified a higher proportion were dissatisfied with telephone consultations and unlikely to have accessibility to video consultation or preferentially opt for this modality.Citation
Jones MT, Arif R, Rai A. Patient Experiences With Telemedicine in a National Health Service Rheumatology Outpatient Department During Coronavirus Disease-19. J Patient Exp. 2021 Aug 19;8:23743735211034973. doi: 10.1177/23743735211034973.Type
ArticleAdditional Links
https://journals.sagepub.com/home/JPXPMID
34435089Journal
Journal of Patient ExperiencePublisher
Sageae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1177/23743735211034973
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