Journal of Medical Internet Research (Oct 2024)

Exploring Physicians’ Perceptions of Digital Health’s Impact on the Patient-Physician Relationship in the Primary Health Care Setting: Qualitative Descriptive Study

  • Kai Ping Sze,
  • Qi Wei Fong,
  • Jacqueline Giovanna De Roza,
  • Eng Sing Lee,
  • Shu Yun Tan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/53705
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26
p. e53705

Abstract

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BackgroundDigital health has become essential for effective clinical practice. However, the successful adoption of digital health is dependent on the strength of the patient-physician relationship. The patient-physician relationship shapes the quality of care and impacts health care outcomes, especially in primary care. However, the impact of the increasing use of digital health on the patient-physician relationship is uncertain. ObjectiveThis study aims to explore the types of digital health primary care physicians use and understand their impact on the patient-physician relationship from their perspective. MethodsThis exploratory qualitative descriptive study used individual in-depth interviews guided by a semistructured topic guide. We purposively sampled physicians from 6 general primary care clinics in Singapore and used thematic analysis to identify emergent themes. ResultsWe conducted 12 interviews. We found that primary care physicians in Singapore had minimal exposure to digital health beyond the scope of institutional implementation. The three key themes that emerged were as follows: (1) evolving roles of both physicians and patients; (2) impact on trust, knowledge acquisition, and longitudinal care; and (3) adoption and use factors of digital health impacting patient-physician relationships. The adoption and use factors comprised “social and personal,” “technical and material,” and “organization and policy” factors. ConclusionsThe study identified that, while primary care physicians held mostly positive views on adopting digital health in improving the patient-physician relationship, they were concerned that digital health might erode trust, hinder proper knowledge acquisition, and reduce humanistic interaction. These concerns called for a nuanced approach to ensure that digital health would not compromise the patient-physician relationship. This could be achieved by ensuring that physicians possess the necessary skills, knowledge, and positive attitude, while health care organizations would provide robust IT capabilities and support. We recommend that education be refined and government policies on digital health adoption and use be revised to align with the goal of strengthening the patient-physician relationship.