Teleneurology by internet and telephone: a study of medical self-help
Larner, Andrew
Medical information is now widely available on the Internet and through telephone helplines such as NHS Direct and the focus on patient self care is likelyto increase. Clinicians in all specialties will often encounter patients who have made self-directed searches for medical information prior to the clinicalencounter. Teleneurology by Internet and Telephone is a study of patient information-seeking behaviour in neurology patients prior to referral from primaryto secondary care. The book analyses frequency of Internet access and use, and of telephone helpline awareness and use. It also explores use of these modalities over time, use according to patient gender and age and by gender and ageover time. Teleneurology by Internet and Telephone is an accessible overview of the utility of these modalities of health information provision and will beof interest not only to neurologists and clinicians in other specialities butalso to public health researchers, sociologists and political scientists withan interest in questions of health care provision. Pragmatic study, rooted inclinical practice, based in district general hospital clinics with findings widely applicable to clinicians’ day-to-day practice and succinct conclusions. Simple methodology and analysis to make statistics more accessible to the reader. Internet and telephone helplines contextualized in field of telemedicine to assist the reader to place the current work in the context of prior developments in telemedicine. INDICE: Introduction. Objectives, Methods, and Analysis. Teleneurology by Internet. Teleneurology by Telephone: NHS Direct. Summary. Bibliography. References.
- ISBN: 978-0-85729-690-0
- Editorial: Springer London
- Encuadernacion: Cartoné
- Páginas: 61
- Fecha Publicación: 31/08/2011
- Nº Volúmenes: 1
- Idioma: Inglés