Objective: Letters from the hospital to the general practitioner are important for maintaining continuity of care. Although doctors feel letters are important, they are often not written on time. To improve the number and timeliness of letters sent from the hospital outpatient department to the general practitioner using an email-based intervention evaluated in a randomized controlled trial. Materials and methods: Users were interviewed to determine the requirements for the intervention. Due to high between-doctor variation at baseline, doctors were matched for baseline performance and pair-randomized. The effectiveness of the intervention was assessed using meta-analytic methods. The primary outcome was the number of patient visits which s...
BACKGROUND: Telephone or text-message reminders have been shown to significantly reduce the rate of ...
Background: In times of vaccine hesitancy and decreasing immunization coverage, it is crucial to exp...
E-mail communication between patients and their providers has diffused slowly in clinical practice. ...
Letters from the hospital to the general practitioner are important for maintaining continuity of ca...
Objective: Letters from the hospital to the general practitioner are important for maintaining conti...
Objective: Letters from the hospital to the general practitioner are important for maintaining conti...
Despite their low cost, the use of email invitations to distribute surveys to medical practitioners ...
BACKGROUND: Email is a popular and commonly-used method of communication, but its use in health care...
Objective: To examine the effectiveness of delivering of computer-generated discharge summaries to g...
Background: The doctor-patient relationship has been eroded by many factors. Would e-mail enhance co...
Abstract Background Engaging practicing physicians in educational strategies that reinforce guidelin...
BACKGROUND: Email is one of the most widely used methods of communication, but its use in healthcare...
BACKGROUND: Email is an established method of communication in business, leisure and education but n...
Email is a popular and commonly-used method of communication, but its use in health care is not rout...
Email is a popular and commonly used method of communication, but its use in health care is not rout...
BACKGROUND: Telephone or text-message reminders have been shown to significantly reduce the rate of ...
Background: In times of vaccine hesitancy and decreasing immunization coverage, it is crucial to exp...
E-mail communication between patients and their providers has diffused slowly in clinical practice. ...
Letters from the hospital to the general practitioner are important for maintaining continuity of ca...
Objective: Letters from the hospital to the general practitioner are important for maintaining conti...
Objective: Letters from the hospital to the general practitioner are important for maintaining conti...
Despite their low cost, the use of email invitations to distribute surveys to medical practitioners ...
BACKGROUND: Email is a popular and commonly-used method of communication, but its use in health care...
Objective: To examine the effectiveness of delivering of computer-generated discharge summaries to g...
Background: The doctor-patient relationship has been eroded by many factors. Would e-mail enhance co...
Abstract Background Engaging practicing physicians in educational strategies that reinforce guidelin...
BACKGROUND: Email is one of the most widely used methods of communication, but its use in healthcare...
BACKGROUND: Email is an established method of communication in business, leisure and education but n...
Email is a popular and commonly-used method of communication, but its use in health care is not rout...
Email is a popular and commonly used method of communication, but its use in health care is not rout...
BACKGROUND: Telephone or text-message reminders have been shown to significantly reduce the rate of ...
Background: In times of vaccine hesitancy and decreasing immunization coverage, it is crucial to exp...
E-mail communication between patients and their providers has diffused slowly in clinical practice. ...