RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 47 The wow consultation JF BMJ Supportive & Palliative Care JO BMJ Support Palliat Care FD British Medical Journal Publishing Group SP A365 OP A365 DO 10.1136/bmjspcare-2017-001407.47 VO 7 IS 3 A1 Sheonad Laidlaw A1 Emma Carduff YR 2017 UL http://spcare.bmj.com/content/7/3/A365.1.abstract AB Marie Curie Care are in the final stages of implementing an Electronic Patient Records (EPR) and Patient Administration System (PAS), via EmisWeb, enabling the recording of real time patient data on the ward by means of Workstations on Wheels (WOWS). It is hoped that the WOWs will be used at the bedside but health care professionals (HCP) are concerned that this will affect the patient centred care that is the cornerstone of Palliative Care.Computers are common place in general practice. Studies by Pearce et al (2011, 2008) have been conducted looking at the relationship and interaction between doctor, patient and computer – the third party in the consultation – and show that the doctor-patient relationship changes as each relates to the computer. No research has looked at this relationship in palliative care.A qualitative study was conducted at the Glasgow hospice using a questionnaire exploring the staff’s feelings about using the WOW in a consultation; their perception of how the patient and their family would feel; how they think that the computer will affect the consultation; and the positives and negatives of using a computer with their patients.Results show that staff are hesitant and nervous of using WOWs by the bedside, seeing it as a physical barrier to verbal and non-verbal communication, potentially impeding the rapport – and ultimately the relationship - between HCP and patient. Staff see the benefit of using computers to capture patient centred data but not at the expense of their relationship with the patient.References. Pearce, C, et al. (2011) “The patient and the computer in the primary care consultation”J Am Med Inform Assoc18 (2): 138–142. Pearce, C, et al. (2008) “Computers in the new consultation: within the first minute”Fam Pract2008 Jun; 25 (3): 202–8