4.7 Article

Low Adoption of Video Consultations in Post-COVID-19 General Practice in Northern Europe: Barriers to Use and Potential Action Points

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INTERNET RESEARCH
Volume 25, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

JMIR PUBLICATIONS, INC
DOI: 10.2196/47173

Keywords

video consultation; adoption; general practice; Northern Europe; barriers; action potential; Europe; viewpoint; consultation; barrier; clinician; digital care; care; implementation; practitioner; COVID-19; research

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In the wake of COVID-19, video consultation was introduced to provide remote health care in many countries. Despite expectations of widespread adoption in general practice, adoption rates remain low across Northern Europe, suggesting barriers exist. This viewpoint highlights the implementation conditions and barriers to video consultations in Northern European general practice settings and calls for further investigation into the impact of cultural elements on adoption.
In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, video consultation was introduced in general practice in many countries around the world as a solution to provide remote health care to patients. It was assumed that video consultation would find widespread adoption in post-COVID-19 general practice. However, adoption rates remain low across countries in Northern Europe, suggesting that barriers to its use exist among general practitioners and other practice staff. In this viewpoint, we take a comparative approach, reflecting on similarities and differences in implementation conditions of video consultations in 5 Northern European countries' general practice settings that might have created barriers to its use within general practice. We convened at a cross-disciplinary seminar in May 2022 with researchers and clinicians from 5 Northern European countries with expertise in digital care in general practice, and this viewpoint emerged out of dialogues from that seminar. We have reflected on barriers across general practice settings in our countries, such as lacking technological and financial support for general practitioners, that we feel are critical for adoption of video consultation in the coming years. Furthermore, there is a need to further investigate the contribution of cultural elements, such as professional norms and values, to adoption. This viewpoint may inform policy work to ensure that a sustainable level of video consultation use can be reached in the future, one that reflects the reality of general practice settings rather than policy optimism.

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