e-Consult implementation success: lessons from 5 county-based delivery systems

Am J Manag Care. 2020 Jan 1;26(1):e21-e27. doi: 10.37765/ajmc.2020.42149.

Abstract

Objectives: Electronic consultation, or e-consult, systems improve specialty care access by conveying specialist expertise to primary care clinicians (PCCs) without requiring specialist visits. Our study evaluates organizational factors for e-consult implementation across 5 publicly financed, county-based health systems in California. Each system serves 40,000 to 180,000 culturally and linguistically diverse patients across 4 to 19 primary care locations.

Study design: We interviewed leaders whose systems received grant funding between 2015 and 2017 to plan and implement e-consult. Interviews discussed platform selection, electronic health record (EHR) compatibility, PCC and specialist opinions, and project governance. We also collected implementing systems' platform operations metrics.

Methods: Mixed methods, including semistructured interviews and quantitative platform metrics. Interviews were analyzed in alignment with the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research inner setting domain.

Results: Three of the 5 systems successfully implemented e-consults. System 1 sustained implementation across 27 specialties, system 2 achieved fragmented implementation, and system 3 reported early-stage implementation. Existing PCC-specialist relationships emerged as the strongest facilitator. E-consult-EHR technology integration was also important, although an add-on platform enabled e-consult expansion in system 2. Although all systems faced challenges, such as project management resourcing, systems 4 and 5 abandoned implementation amid compound climate and readiness barriers.

Conclusions: Successful e-consult implementations in public delivery systems leveraged (1) prior primary care and specialty care clinician relationships and (2) integrated EHR and e-consult platforms. This contrasts with common expectations that new technology will overcome care delivery gaps. Findings add to existing e-consult implementation literature that emphasizes reimbursement and leadership champions.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • California
  • Health Facility Administrators / psychology*
  • Health Information Systems / organization & administration*
  • Humans
  • Interprofessional Relations
  • Organizational Case Studies*
  • Primary Health Care
  • Remote Consultation / organization & administration*
  • Specialization