Article

Early experience of the use of short message service (SMS) technology in routine clinical care

Details

Citation

Neville R, Reed C, Boswell B, Sergeant P, Aitchison P & Sullivan FM (2008) Early experience of the use of short message service (SMS) technology in routine clinical care. Informatics in Primary Care, 16 (3), pp. 203-211. https://doi.org/10.14236/jhi.v16i3.695

Abstract
Objective To conduct a technical appraisal and qualitative interviews with short message service (SMS – mobile phone text message) users in mainstream health care.  Design Observation of service usage followed by in-depth semi-structured interviews. Setting A National Health Service (NHS) general practice in Scotland.  Participants One hundred and eighty patients registered.  Main outcome measures Service utilisation and patients’ views.  Results It was technically feasible to open up access to mainstream NHS general practice services using SMS for appointment booking, repeat prescription ordering, clinical enquiries and remote access to the core clinical summary.  Conclusion Patients were able to use SMS services responsibly and found automation of prescription ordering particularly useful. Service utilisation was modest and did not adversely impact on the workload of general practitioners (GPs) or their staf

Keywords
general practice; mobile phone; short message service

Journal
Informatics in Primary Care: Volume 16, Issue 3

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2008
PublisherBCS, The Chartered Institute for IT
ISSN1476-0320