Welcome Guest | Login | Register | Why Register? |
Newsletter RSS Twitter
09 February 2010 | 14:35 GMT


HOME | CONTACT | NEWS | DOCUMENT LIBRARY | FEATURES | OPINION & ANALYSIS | EVENTS | RESEARCH REPORTS | CASE STUDIES

Preventing errors in phone consultations

Tags: Confidentiality  

27 Oct 2005

A reminder to doctors to beware of the pitfalls of using the telephone to communicate with patients has come from researchers at Yale School of Medicine.

Using a case-based approach, the article in the Journal of General Internal Medicine, shows how errors in telephone communication can result in outcomes ranging from inconvenience and anxiety to compromises in patient safety.

The case vignettes discussed include:

Other cases deal with getting information from family members, dealing with a patient who is unintelligible, coping with requests for narcotics and talking to patients who are ill but need a surgery-hours appointment rather than an emergency visit or referral.

Referring to US data, the researchers say that although 25% of interactions between doctors and patients occur by telephone only 6% of residency training courses teach telephone medicine.

They say that doctors in practice and in training can benefit from a regular review of telephone cases, both for educational purposes and for making practice policies.

The article also discusses other forms of communication outside the face-to-face consultation. The researchers say: “Asynchronous communication using technologies such as e-mail, web-based communication, and telemedicine is becoming increasingly popular between physicians and patients. Some principles discussed here, such as how and when to notify patients of significant test results to ensure confidentiality and avoid excess stress, are relevant to e-mail and web-based communication, as are establishing standard practice policies for prescribing controlled medications outside the office visit.

“In other situations, what works on the phone may not fit into the framework of other non face-to-face technologies. With e-mail, for example, clues to a patient's emotion that might be uncovered through careful listening are unavailable. The asynchronous nature of e-mail and web-based communication makes it difficult to follow the evolution of an acute illness over a short period of time.”

J Gen Intern Med. 2005;20(10):959-963. (Available on Medscape www.medscape.com. Free registration required).

© 2005 E-HEALTH-MEDIA LTD. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Search
News Features Jobs Newsletters

Featured_recruiters
Featured_recruiters