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Is the routine recording of primary care consultations possible … and desirable? Lessons for researchers from a consultation with multiple stakeholders

Rushmer, Rosemary; Themessel-Huber, Mark; Coyle, Joanne; Humphris, Gerry; Dowell, Jon; Williams, Brian

Authors

Rosemary Rushmer

Mark Themessel-Huber

Joanne Coyle

Gerry Humphris

Jon Dowell

Brian Williams



Abstract

Objective: To explore stakeholders' attitudes towards routine, longitudinal recording of primary care consultations for research purposes, and to identify legal, ethical, and practical barriers and facilitators. Methods: 183 stakeholders (including patients, researchers and practice staff) were identified using a purposeful sampling strategy. Stakeholders participated in focus groups and interviews. The data was analysed thematically in an iterative manner with themes and questions from earlier discussions being raised with later participants. Results: Most participants supported the creation of a database and believed it would benefit patient care. They suggested it could be used to train doctors, aid understanding of conditions, and feed information back to practices to improve performance. However, enthusiasm was tempered by concerns about the ownership security and access of the data; quality and limitations of the dataset; impact on behaviour; and workload. Safeguards were suggested that protected vulnerable individuals, enabled participation, gave control to participants, and clarified data use. Conclusion: The findings show that collecting such longitudinal data is possible, valuable and acceptable providing certain safeguards are in place. Practice implications: Future studies employing routine recordings of consultations should: * Attend to confidentiality, access and governance of the archive. * Collect quality data, and store it securely.

Citation

Rushmer, R., Themessel-Huber, M., Coyle, J., Humphris, G., Dowell, J., & Williams, B. (2011). Is the routine recording of primary care consultations possible … and desirable? Lessons for researchers from a consultation with multiple stakeholders. Patient Education and Counseling, 82(2), 247-253. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pec.2010.04.020

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Apr 22, 2010
Online Publication Date May 23, 2010
Publication Date 2011-02
Deposit Date Sep 23, 2016
Journal Patient Education and Counseling
Print ISSN 0738-3991
Electronic ISSN 1873-5134
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 82
Issue 2
Pages 247-253
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pec.2010.04.020
Keywords Medicine; Primary care; Consultation study; GP–patient consultations;
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/389254