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The impact of electronic consultation on a Canadian tertiary care pediatric specialty referral system: A prospective single-center observational study
Author(s) -
Lillian Lai,
Clare Liddy,
Erin Keely,
Amir Afkham,
Julia Kurzawa,
Nishard Abdeen,
Tobey Audcent,
Matthew Bromwich,
Jason Brophy,
Sasha Carsen,
Annick Fournier,
Leigh Fraser-Roberts,
Hazen Gandy,
Charles Hui,
Donna L. Johnston,
Kathryn Keely,
Ken Kontio,
Christine Lamontagne,
Nathalie Major,
Michael D. O’Connor,
Dhenuka Radhakrishnan,
Joe Reisman,
Marjorie Robb,
Lindy Samson,
Erick Sell,
William M. Splinter,
Judy van Stralen,
Sunita Venkateswaran,
Kimmo Murto
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0190247
Subject(s) - specialty , medicine , observational study , referral , family medicine , workload , pediatrics , medical emergency , pathology , computer science , operating system
Background Champlain BASE ™ (Building Access to Specialists through eConsultation) is a web-based asynchronous electronic communication service that allows primary-care- practitioners (PCPs) to submit “elective” clinical questions to a specialist. For adults, PCPs have reported improved access and timeliness to specialist advice, averted face-to-face specialist referrals in up to 40% of cases and high provider satisfaction. Objective To determine whether the expansion of eConsult to a pediatric setting would result in similar measures of improved healthcare system process and high provider acceptance reported in adults. Design Prospective observational cohort study. Setting Single Canadian tertiary-care academic pediatric hospital (June 2014–16) servicing 1.2 million people. Participants 1. PCPs already using eConsult. 2.Volunteer pediatric specialists provided services in addition to their regular workload. 3.Pediatric patients (< 18 years-old) referred for none-acute care conditions. Main outcomes and measures Specialty service utilization and access, impact on PCP course-of-action and referral-patterns and survey-based provider satisfaction data were collected. Results 1064 eConsult requests from 367 PCPs were answered by 23 pediatric specialists representing 14 specialty-services. The top three specialties represented were: General Pediatrics 393 cases (36.9%), Orthopedics 162 (15.2%) and Psychiatry 123 (11.6%). Median specialist response time was 0.9 days (range <1 hour-27 days), most consults (63.2%) required <10minutes to complete and 21/21(100%) specialist survey-respondents reported minimal workload burden. For 515/1064(48.4%) referrals, PCPs received advice for a new or additional course of action; 391/1064(36.7%) referrals resulted in an averted face-to-face specialist visit. In 9 specialties with complete data, the median wait-time was significantly less (p<0.001) for an eConsult (1 day, 95%CI:0.9–1.2) compared with a face-to-face referral (132 days; 95%CI:127–136). The majority (>93.3%) of PCPs rated eConsult as very good/excellent value for both patients and themselves. All specialist survey-respondents indicated eConsult should be a continued service. Conclusions and relevance Similar to adults, eConsult improves PCP access and timeliness to elective pediatric specialist advice and influences their care decisions, while reporting high end-user satisfaction. Further study is warranted to assess impact on resource utilization and clinical outcomes.

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