Background Patient demand for email contact with physician practices is high. If physicians met this demand, improvements in communication, quality of care and patient satisfaction could result. However, physicians have typically been hesitant to communicate electronically with patients, largely due to concerns relating to workload, security and lack of compensation. Goal To assess physician attitudes towards electronic communication with patients six months after the implementation of an application called Patient Gateway. Patient Gateway allows patients to access an extract of their medical record and facilitates online communication with medical practices. Methods A paper-based survey was administered to the 43 primary care physicians in...
Reviewer: Ross, StephenReviewer: Scherger, JosephReviewer: Endsley, Scott[This item is a preserved c...
Background: Internet-based interactive websites for patient communication (patient portals) may impr...
Several studies suggest that patients want the ability to communicate electronically with their phys...
Background Patient demand for email contact with physician practices is high. If physicians met this...
E-mail communication between patients and their providers has diffused slowly in clinical practice. ...
<strong>Background</strong> Global access to information technology has increased dramatically in th...
Several studies suggest that patients want the ability to communicate electronically with their phys...
Reviewer: Greiver, M[This item is a preserved copy and is not necessarily the most recent version. T...
communication with patients is increas-ing in clinical practice. The TransforMED1 model of the Patie...
Email is an accepted part of modern communication in business and education. The use of email could ...
Abstract: Secure e-mailing between Kaiser Permanente physicians and patients is widespread; primary ...
Background: The doctor-patient relationship has been eroded by many factors. Would e-mail enhance co...
Presents survey findings on physicians' use of e-mail to communicate with patients about clinical is...
BackgroundElectronic and internet-based tools for patient-provider communication are becoming the st...
Patient-physician communication is moving online. While face-to-face communication remains critical,...
Reviewer: Ross, StephenReviewer: Scherger, JosephReviewer: Endsley, Scott[This item is a preserved c...
Background: Internet-based interactive websites for patient communication (patient portals) may impr...
Several studies suggest that patients want the ability to communicate electronically with their phys...
Background Patient demand for email contact with physician practices is high. If physicians met this...
E-mail communication between patients and their providers has diffused slowly in clinical practice. ...
<strong>Background</strong> Global access to information technology has increased dramatically in th...
Several studies suggest that patients want the ability to communicate electronically with their phys...
Reviewer: Greiver, M[This item is a preserved copy and is not necessarily the most recent version. T...
communication with patients is increas-ing in clinical practice. The TransforMED1 model of the Patie...
Email is an accepted part of modern communication in business and education. The use of email could ...
Abstract: Secure e-mailing between Kaiser Permanente physicians and patients is widespread; primary ...
Background: The doctor-patient relationship has been eroded by many factors. Would e-mail enhance co...
Presents survey findings on physicians' use of e-mail to communicate with patients about clinical is...
BackgroundElectronic and internet-based tools for patient-provider communication are becoming the st...
Patient-physician communication is moving online. While face-to-face communication remains critical,...
Reviewer: Ross, StephenReviewer: Scherger, JosephReviewer: Endsley, Scott[This item is a preserved c...
Background: Internet-based interactive websites for patient communication (patient portals) may impr...
Several studies suggest that patients want the ability to communicate electronically with their phys...