“…A few studies have focused on calls between hospital coworkers, investigating for instance the telephone communication of physicians (Aziz et al, 2005;Ortega, Taksali, Smart, & Baumgaertner, 2009;Soto, Chu, Goldman, Rampil, & Ruskin, 2006), among the staff of general internal medicine units (Lo, Wu, Morra, Lee, & Reeves, 2012;Whitlow, Drake, Tullmann, Hoke, & Barth, 2014;Wu et al, 2010), between floor nurses and on-call physicians (Bernstam et al, 2007) and between nurses in medical emergency centres and physicians on duty (Tjora, 2000). The majority of the existing studies revolve around safety issues related to mobile phones (Myerson & Mitchell, 2003) and their pros and cons compared with pager-mediated contact Ortega et al, 2009;Soto et al, 2006) and landline telephone use (Hanada, Fujiki, Nakakuni, & Sullivan, 2006). They also examine the usefulness of telephone communication between physicians in terms of continuity of care (Blankenship, Menapace, Fox, & Frey, 1999;Crone, 1987), ways remote and technology-mediated work communication may balance the nurse-physician professional relationship (Tjora, 2000) and the reasons for after-hours nurse-to-physician calls (Bernstam et al, 2007).…”