RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Computer screening for palliative care needs in primary care: a mixed-methods study JF British Journal of General Practice JO Br J Gen Pract FD British Journal of General Practice SP e360 OP e369 DO 10.3399/bjgp18X695729 VO 68 IS 670 A1 Bruce Mason A1 Kirsty Boyd A1 John Steyn A1 Marilyn Kendall A1 Stella Macpherson A1 Scott A Murray YR 2018 UL http://bjgp.org/content/68/670/e360.abstract AB Background Though the majority of people could benefit from palliative care before they die, most do not receive this approach, especially those with multimorbidity and frailty. GPs find it difficult to identify such patients.Aim To refine and evaluate the utility of a computer application (AnticiPal) to help primary care teams screen their registered patients for people who could benefit from palliative care.Design and setting A mixed-methods study of eight GP practices in Scotland, conducted in 2016–2017.Method After a search development cycle the authors adopted a mixed-methods approach, combining analysis of the number of people identified by the search with qualitative observations of the computer search as used by primary care teams, and interviews with professionals and patients.Results The search identified 0.8% of 62 708 registered patients. A total of 27 multidisciplinary meetings were observed, and eight GPs and 10 patients were interviewed. GPs thought the search identified many unrecognised patients with advanced multimorbidity and frailty, but were concerned about workload implications of assessment and care planning. Patients and carers endorsed the value of proactive identification of people with advanced illness.Conclusion GP practices can use computer searching to generate lists of patients for review and care planning. The challenges of starting a conversation about the future remain. However, most patients regard key components of palliative care (proactive planning, including sharing information with urgent care services) as important. Screening for people with deteriorating health at risk from unplanned care is a current focus for quality improvement and should not be limited by labelling it solely as ‘palliative care’.