4.6 Article

Disruption or innovation? A qualitative descriptive study on the use of electronic patient-physician communication in patients with advanced cancer

Journal

SUPPORTIVE CARE IN CANCER
Volume 26, Issue 8, Pages 2785-2792

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00520-018-4103-7

Keywords

Team-based care; Secure messaging; Clinical collaboration; eHealth evaluation

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes for Health Research MD/PhD studentship
  2. McLaughlin Foundation fellowship
  3. clinician-scientist award from the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research (OICR)
  4. Giblon Professorship at the Department of Family and Community Medicine
  5. Canadian Institute of Health Research New Investigator Award
  6. Academic Health Science Centre (AHSC) AFP Innovation Fund-Mount Sinai Hospital/University Health Network Academic Medical Organization (AMO)
  7. Temmy Latner Centre for Palliative Care

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Purpose In the advanced cancer context, care coordination is often inadequate, leading to suboptimal continuity of care. We evaluated an electronic web-based tool which assembles the patient, their caregivers, and their healthcare providers in a virtual space for team-based communication. We sought to understand participant perceptions on electronic communication in general and the added value of the new tool in particular. Methods We conducted a qualitative descriptive study with participants (patients, caregivers, cancer physicians) who participated in a 3-month pilot trial evaluating the tool. Interviews were thematically analyzed and the perspectives from patients, caregivers, and cancer physicians were triangulated. Interviews from six patients, five of their caregivers, and seven cancer physicians conducted alongside monthly outcome assessments were analyzed. Results We identified five themes relating participants' perspectives on electronic communication to their experience of care: (1) apparent gaps in care, (2) uncertainty in defining the circle of care, (3) relational aspects of communication, (4) incongruence between technology and social norms of patient-physician communication, and (5) appreciation but apprehension about the team-based communication tool for improving the experience of care. Conclusions The potential of tools for electronic communication to bring together a team of healthcare providers with the patient and caregivers is significant but may pose new challenges to existing team structure and interpersonal dynamics. Patients and physicians were worried about the impact that electronic communication may have on the patient-physician relationship. Implementation approaches, which build on the relationship and integrate the team as a whole, could positively position electronic communication to enhance the team-based care.

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