TY - JOUR T1 - A computer template to enhance patient-centredness in multimorbidity reviews: a qualitative evaluation in primary care JF - British Journal of General Practice JO - Br J Gen Pract DO - 10.3399/bjgp18X696353 SP - bjgp18X696353 AU - Cindy Mann AU - Alison Shaw AU - Lesley Wye AU - Chris Salisbury AU - Bruce Guthrie Y1 - 2018/05/22 UR - http://bjgp.org/content/early/2018/05/24/bjgp18X696353.abstract N2 - Background Computer templates for review of single long-term conditions are commonly used to record care processes, but they may inhibit communication and prevent patients from discussing their wider concerns.Aim To evaluate the effect on patient-centredness of a novel computer template used in multimorbidity reviews.Design and setting A qualitative process evaluation of a randomised controlled trial in 33 GP practices in England and Scotland examining the implementation of a patient-centred complex intervention intended to improve management of multimorbidity. A purpose-designed computer template combining long-term condition reviews was used to support the patient-centred intervention.Method Twenty-eight reviews using the intervention computer template and nine usual-care reviews were observed and recorded. Sixteen patient interviews, four patient focus groups, and 23 clinician interviews were also conducted in eight of the 12 intervention practices. Transcripts were thematically analysed based on predefined core components of patient-centredness and template use.Results Disrupted communication was more evident in intervention reviews because the template was unfamiliar, but the first template question about patients’ important health issues successfully elicited wide-ranging health concerns. Patients welcomed the more holistic, comprehensive reviews, and some unmet healthcare needs were identified. Most clinicians valued identifying patients’ agendas, but some felt it diverted attention from care of long-term conditions. Goal-setting was GP-led rather than collaborative.Conclusion Including patient-centred questions in long-term condition review templates appears to improve patients’ perceptions about the patient-centredness of reviews, despite template demands on a clinician’s attention. Adding an initial question in standardised reviews about the patient’s main concerns should be considered. ER -