Teaching patient safety in remote consulting

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Teaching patient safety in remote consulting. / King, Kate; Payne, Rebecca.
In: Education for Primary Care, 16.09.2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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APA

King, K., & Payne, R. (2024). Teaching patient safety in remote consulting. Education for Primary Care. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1080/14739879.2024.2383457

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MLA

VancouverVancouver

King K, Payne R. Teaching patient safety in remote consulting. Education for Primary Care. 2024 Sept 16. Epub 2024 Sept 16. doi: 10.1080/14739879.2024.2383457

Author

King, Kate ; Payne, Rebecca. / Teaching patient safety in remote consulting. In: Education for Primary Care. 2024.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Teaching patient safety in remote consulting

AU - King, Kate

AU - Payne, Rebecca

PY - 2024/9/16

Y1 - 2024/9/16

N2 - A significant proportion of primary care consultations now happen remotely. Although the vast majority occur safely, a recent study highlighted areas of risk which may be compounded by the limited training many GPs have received in remote consulting. To provide safe remote services, consideration needs to be given to adapting practice workflow to optimise remote care. Patients less suitable for remote consulting, either due to disease, extremes of age, disability or for social reasons should be identified and prioritised for face-to-face encounters. Training supports both the development of individual communication skills for remote care, and effective team working. Practice-based group learning events can be used to share experiences, identify resources, and consider the risks in remote care and how they can be mitigated. The paper presents some fictionalised cases, illustrating where patients came to harm, as a result of a remote consultation, and where harm was averted due to actions taken by practice teams. These can be used to support critical thinking and discussion within practice development meetings and tutorials with trainee GPs and other practice staff. Using the paper as a basis for reflection, teaching and action can facilitate the delivery of safer remote care.

AB - A significant proportion of primary care consultations now happen remotely. Although the vast majority occur safely, a recent study highlighted areas of risk which may be compounded by the limited training many GPs have received in remote consulting. To provide safe remote services, consideration needs to be given to adapting practice workflow to optimise remote care. Patients less suitable for remote consulting, either due to disease, extremes of age, disability or for social reasons should be identified and prioritised for face-to-face encounters. Training supports both the development of individual communication skills for remote care, and effective team working. Practice-based group learning events can be used to share experiences, identify resources, and consider the risks in remote care and how they can be mitigated. The paper presents some fictionalised cases, illustrating where patients came to harm, as a result of a remote consultation, and where harm was averted due to actions taken by practice teams. These can be used to support critical thinking and discussion within practice development meetings and tutorials with trainee GPs and other practice staff. Using the paper as a basis for reflection, teaching and action can facilitate the delivery of safer remote care.

KW - primary care

KW - general practice

KW - safety

KW - education

KW - training

U2 - 10.1080/14739879.2024.2383457

DO - 10.1080/14739879.2024.2383457

M3 - Article

JO - Education for Primary Care

JF - Education for Primary Care

SN - 1475-990X

ER -