The separate focus groups were held in convenient locations (for example, health centres, community centres, and hotels). A literature-based topic guide was used, where necessary, to stimulate relevant free-flowing discussion. This was modified during pilot focus groups (n = 3) and during the course of the study to incorporate arising themes. Discussions were audio recorded, transcribed verbatim, and entered into NVivo 7. Concurrent data analysis allowed emergent themes to be incorporated and explored in subsequent interviews. Data generation continued until saturation occurred.15
How this fits in
Telephone consultations are increasingly being used to improve access to healthcare. However, very little is known about how they differ from traditional face-to-face clinical encounters in terms of content, quality, and safety. This study revealed that, while telephone consultations were seen as convenient for both patients and clinicians, there were concerns about patient safety, particularly when used for diagnostic triage mainly by urban clinicians. Telephone consulting was considered more suited to follow-up and management of long-term conditions where an initial diagnostic assessment has been made and, if employed in this way, could facilitate continuity of care and save travel time and costs for patients.