Best Practices
The Use of Secure Messaging in Medical Specialty Care
The benefits of improving communication between health care providers and patients outweigh secure messaging’s implementation challenges.
Mr. McAdams is a third-year medical student at the Boston University School of Medicine; Ms. Cannavo is the director of quality management and Dr. Orlander is associate chief of the medical service, both at the VA Boston Healthcare System; Dr. Orlander is also a Professor of Medicine at the Boston University School of Medicine and the Evans Department of Medicine, Section of General Internal Medicine, both in Boston, all in Massachusetts.
Nine months after full implementation, perceptions of e-Consult processes were solicited. All PCPs, staff physicians, nurse practitioners, and internal medicine residents assigned to a VABHS primary care clinic were surveyed. Eligible specialist consultants included attending physicians and fellows who were identified by the specialty chief as potentially having responded to an e-Consult in the past 6 months. The survey was administered in June 2012 and queried the previous 6 months’ experience.
The monthly number of e-Consults ranged from 96 to 137 over the 6-month study period. Cardiology and hematology were the most commonly requested e-Consults, with > 20 per specialty per month. The 146 cardiology e-Consults during those 6 months represented 20% of all new cardiology consults, whereas the 159 e-Consults to hematology represented 53% of their new consults. The least used specialties for e-Consults were allergy, oncology, palliative care, and rheumatology, each averaging < 2 e-Consults per month.
Provider Perceptions
Overall, 85 of the 163 providers completed the survey (52%). Permanent staff had a better response rate than did trainees: 58% vs 33% among PCPs (P < .02), and 71% vs 44% among specialists (P = .03).
Of the 47 primary care respondents, 4 residents and 2 staff physicians had not previously used e-Consults; all 4 residents and 1 staff physician stated that this was due to lack of awareness of the system. The remaining 41 PCPs had requested ≥ 1 e-Consult in the past 6 months. All 38 specialist provider respondents had answered ≥ 1 e-Consult in study period, with 9 providers completing > 20.
e-Consult Satisfaction
Overall, 93% of PCPs were satisfied with e-Consults, and none were dissatisfied, compared with 53% of specialty providers who were satisfied and 26% who were dissatisfied (P < .001) (Figure 1). All specialists who were dissatisfied were in the sections of cardiology or gastroenterology. Further inspection identified several differences between those specialty providers who were generally satisfied with e-Consults (n = 20) compared with those providers who were dissatisfied (n = 10). Eight PCPs reported being neither satisfied nor dissatisfied.
In analyses comparing satisfied specialists (n = 20) with dissatisfied specialists (n = 10), excluding the 8 respondents who were neither satisfied nor dissatisfied, those who were satisfied reported a lower rate of conversion of e-Consults to FTF visits than did their dissatisfied peers, 26% vs 52%, respectively (P = .01). Satisfied specialists were more likely to view e-Consults as replacing work they otherwise would have done, such as a replacement for a FTF consult and prior informal “curbside” consults, 79% vs 50%, respectively (P < .02). Satisfied specialists were somewhat more likely to complete their e-Consults, on average, in ≤ 15 minutes, compared with dissatisfied specialists, although this trend did not reach statistical significance (59% vs 49%, respectively; (P = .07) (Figure 2).
Improving Quality of Care
PCPs were asked to note which benefits were realized among patients for whom e-Consults replaced FTF visits. Nearly all (98%) indicated that the e-Consults enabled patients to avoid unnecessary travel, and 95% of PCPs indicated that they requested e-consults to receive faster clinical input about a patient. A total of 59% believed e-Consults helped their patients avoid additional copays, and 56% obtained specialty input for a patient who would otherwise refuse to travel. When an e-Consult did not avoid a FTF visit (ie, despite the e-Consult, the patient ultimately proceeded to a FTF consultation with the specialist), the majority of PCPs believed that the e-Consult provided them with reassurance and initiated diagnostic testing that would be useful during the patient’s subsequent FTF consult (Figure 3).
Overall, 61% of specialists agreed with the statement, “e-Consults improve the quality of care VA Boston Healthcare System provides.” Even when specialists perceived that e-Consults did not avoid FTF visits, most agreed that e-Consults helped initiate diagnostic testing prior to a FTF visit. In addition, satisfied specialists saw the benefit in reassuring the PCP and initiating additional management prior to a FTF visit.
Dynamics of e-Consults
Primary care providers reported that 78% of their requested e-Consults were completed within 2 days and 95% of all e-Consults were completed by day 3. In aggregate, primary care clinicians estimated that about one-third of their e-Consults replaced FTF visits; one-third replaced prior mechanisms for informal consultation (eg, “curbside” or e-mail); and one-third of e-Consults represented new requests that would not have involved specialty consultation in the absence of the e-Consult mechanism.
Specialists estimated that 27% of e-Consults were new work (ie, consultations that would not have occurred formally or informally in the absence of the e-Consult mechanism); 32% replaced FTF visits; and 42% were substitutes for prior informal communications. Specialists reported a wide range of time required to answer e-Consults. For specialists, on average, 54% of e-Consults took < 15 minutes to complete, but 20% took > 25 minutes, with 6% requiring ≥ 45 minutes to complete (Figure 2).
The benefits of improving communication between health care providers and patients outweigh secure messaging’s implementation challenges.
The Office of Specialty Care Transformation developed the Electronic Consultation (E-Consult) initiative to improve access to specialty care for...
The VA is the largest provider of mental health care in the U.S.(1) On April 19, 2012, Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki addressed...