BMJ 1995;311:848-852 (30 September)

General practice

Has general practitioner computing made a difference to patient care? A systematic review of published reports

Frank Sullivan, senior lecturer,a Elizabeth Mitchell, research assistant a

a Department of General Practice, University of Glasgow, Woodside Health Centre, Glasgow G20 7LR

Correspondence to: Dr Sullivan.

Abstract

Objective: To review findings from studies of the influence of desktop computers on primary care consultations.
Design: Systematic review of world reports from 1984 to 1994.
Setting: The computerised catalogues of Medline, BIDS, and GPlit were searched, as well as conference proceedings, books, bibliographies, and references in books and journal articles.
Subjects: 30 papers met the inclusion criteria and were included for detailed review.
Interventions: A validated scheme for assessing methodological adequacy was used to score each paper.
Main outcome measures: Papers were rated on sample formation, baseline differences, unit of allocation, outcome measures, and follow up. Differences in outcomes were also recorded.
Results: Four of the six papers dealing with the consultation process showed that consultations took longer. Doctor initiated and "medical" content of consultations increased at the expense of a reduction in patient initiated and "social" content. Each of the 21 studies which looked at clinician performance showed an improvement when a computer was used (from 8% to 50%, with better results for single preventive measures). Only one of the three studies looking at patient outcomes showed an improvement (diastolic blood pressure control 5 mm Hg better after one year, with fewer doctor-patient consultations).
Conclusions: Using a computer in the consultation may help improve clinician performance but may increase the length of the consultation. More studies are needed to assess the effects on patient outcomes of using a computer in consultations.

Key messages

  • Key messages

  • Using a computer during a consultation lengthens the consultation time by 48-90 seconds

  • Use of a computer during consultations improves immunisation rates by 8-18% and other preventive tasks by up to 50%

  • Using a computer during consultations does not seem to have appreciable impact on patient satisfaction

  • More work is needed to assess the effects of primary care computing on patient outcomes


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