Abstract
BackgroundThe objective is to examine and synthesise the best available experimental evidence about the effect of ambulatory consultation duration on quality of healthcare.MethodsWe included experimental studies manipulating the length of outpatient clinical encounters between adult patients and clinicians (ie, therapists, pharmacists, nurses, physicians) to determine their effect on quality of care (ie, effectiveness, efficiency, timeliness, safety, equity, patient-centredness and patient satisfaction).Information sourcesUsing controlled vocabulary and keywords, without restriction by language or year of publication, we searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials and Database of Systematic Reviews and Scopus from inception until 15 May 2023.Risk of biasCochrane Risk of Bias instrument.Data synthesisNarrative synthesis.Results11 publications of 10 studies explored the relationship between encounter duration and quality. Most took place in the UK’s general practice over two decades ago. Study findings based on very sparse and outdated evidence—which suggested that longer consultations improved indicators of patient-centred care, education about prevention and clinical referrals; and that consultation duration was inconsistently related to patient satisfaction and clinical outcomes—warrant low confidence due to limited protections against bias and indirect applicability to current practice.ConclusionExperimental evidence for a minimal or optimal duration of an outpatient consultation is sparse and outdated. To develop evidence-based policies and practices about encounter length, randomised trials of different consultation lengths—in person and virtually, and with electronic health records—are needed.Trial registration numberOSF Registration DOI:10.17605/OSF.IO/EUDK8.
Funder
Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy,Leadership and Management