Barriers and Benefits of the Scheduled Telephone Referral Model (DETELPROG): A Qualitative Approach

The recently developed scheduled mobile-telephone referral model (DETELPROG) has achieved especially important results in reducing waiting days for patients, but it has been decided to explore what barriers and positive aspects were detected by both primary care physicians (PCPs) and hospital attend...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of environmental research and public health 2021-05, Vol.18 (10), p.5280, Article 5280
Hauptverfasser: Azogil-Lopez, Luis Miguel, Coronado-Vazquez, Valle, Perez-Lazaro, Juan Jose, Gomez-Salgado, Juan, Medrano-Sanchez, Esther Maria
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container_issue 10
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container_title International journal of environmental research and public health
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creator Azogil-Lopez, Luis Miguel
Coronado-Vazquez, Valle
Perez-Lazaro, Juan Jose
Gomez-Salgado, Juan
Medrano-Sanchez, Esther Maria
description The recently developed scheduled mobile-telephone referral model (DETELPROG) has achieved especially important results in reducing waiting days for patients, but it has been decided to explore what barriers and positive aspects were detected by both primary care physicians (PCPs) and hospital attending physicians (HAPs) regarding its use. For this, a qualitative descriptive study was carried out through six semi-structured interviews and two focus groups in a sample of eleven PCPs and five HAPs. Interviews were carried out from September 2019 to February 2020. Data were analysed by creating the initial categories, recording the sessions, transcribing the information, by doing a comprehensive reading of the texts obtained, and analysing the contents. The results show that DETELPROG gives the PCP greater prominence as a patient's health coordinator by improving their relationship and patient safety; it also improves the relationship between PCP and HAP, avoiding unnecessary face-to-face referrals and providing safety to the PCP when making decisions. The barriers for DETELPROG to be used by PCP were defensive medicine, patients' skepticism in DETELPROG, healthcare burden, and inability to focus on the patient or interpret a sign, symptom, or diagnostic test. For HAP, the barriers were lack of confidence in the PCP and complexity of the patient. As a conclusion, DETELPROG referral model provides a lot of advantages and does not pose any new barrier to face-to-face referral or other non-face-to-face referral models, so it should be implemented in primary care.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/ijerph18105280
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subjects Communication
Communications technology
Data collection
Environmental Sciences
Environmental Sciences & Ecology
Focus groups
Health care
Hospitals
Internal medicine
Interviews
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Medical referrals
Medical research
Patients
Physicians
Population
Primary care
Professionals
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
Rural areas
Science & Technology
Semantics
Telemedicine
title Barriers and Benefits of the Scheduled Telephone Referral Model (DETELPROG): A Qualitative Approach
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