Experiences of remote consultation in UK primary care for patients with mental health conditions: A systematic review

Author:

Antonio Serena1ORCID,Joseph David1,Parsons Joanne1ORCID,Atherton Helen1

Affiliation:

1. Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK

Abstract

Objectives There has been a rapid shift from face-to-face to remote consultation across healthcare settings. 90% of patients with mental health conditions are cared for entirely in primary care. Remote consultation can present challenges and benefits for patients with mental health conditions. The aim of this systematic review was to collate and examine the evidence relating to remote consultation in UK primary care on the experiences of patients with mental health conditions. Methods Six major databases were searched for empirical studies published in the English language between 1 January 2010 and 21 October 2022. Studies were included where remote consultation occurred between a patient and primary care clinician. Outcomes of interest include mode of remote consultation, patient experiences and characteristics. Final included studies were assessed for quality, and results analysed with narrative synthesis. Results Six studies met the inclusion criteria, covering a range of mental health conditions and remote consultation modalities (telephone, video, online, email, text-based). Patients were overall satisfied with remote consultation, with particular benefit for certain mental health conditions or anxious patients. However, several studies found that face-to-face was the preferred method, with highlighted negatives to remote consultation, such as inflexibility of online formats. Acceptability of remote consultation is context specific and influenced by the purpose of the consultation and individual patient. Remote consultation may reduce anxiety in some patients, but is potentially less acceptable than face-to-face for relational appointments. Conclusions Acceptability of remote consultation is context dependent. There is a lack of evidence surrounding patient characteristics and access to remote consultation.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference32 articles.

1. Royal College of General Practitioners. Mental health in primary care. https://www.rcgp.org.uk/representing-you/policy-areas/mental-health-in-primary-care (2017, accessed 31 October 2022).

2. Mind. 40 per cent of all GP appointments about mental health. https://www.mind.org.uk/news-campaigns/news/40-per-cent-of-all-gp-appointments-about-mental-health/ (2018, accessed 31 October 2022).

3. Royal College of General Practitioners. RCGP survey provides snapshot of how GP care is accessed in latest stages of pandemic. https://www.rcgp.org.uk/about-us/news/2020/july/rcgp-survey-provides-snapshot-of-how-gp-care-is-accessed-in-latest-stages-of-pandemic.aspx (2020, accessed 18 February 2022).

4. Hancock M. Speech “The future of healthcare”. The Royal College of Physicians. London, UK Government, https://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/the-future-of-healthcare, (2020, accessed 28 May 2022).

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