Moffatt Jennifer J, Eley Diann S
The University of Queensland, School of Medicine, Rural Clinical School, Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia.
Rural Remote Health. 2011;11(2):1581. Epub 2011 Feb 10.
The continued poorer health status of rural and remote Australians when compared with their urban counterparts is cause for concern. The use of advanced technology to improve access to health care has the potential to assist in addressing this problem. Telemedicine is one example of such technology which has advanced rapidly in its capacity to increase access to healthcare services or provide previously unavailable services. The important anticipated benefits of greater access to healthcare services are improved health outcomes and more cost-effective delivery.
A national study was conducted to investigate the current perceived use and usefulness of telemedicine from the perspective of users and providers, and their views on how telemedicine could be expanded in Australia. In one component of this national study, the expert opinion of experienced providers of telemedicine services was elicited using a Grounded Theory approach and using semi-structured interviews which were analysed thematically. This article reports on the barriers to the up-take of telemedicine identified by this sub-sample.
The primary barriers identified were: funding; time; infrastructure; equipment; skills; and preference for the traditional approach. While funding is a well-known barrier to the up-take of telemedicine, the extra time required for a telemedicine consultation has particular implications for the workload of rural doctors. The comparatively poor internet access available in rural Australia combines with difficulties accessing some items such as a computer, to make equipment an issue. Even though lack of equipment skills was identified as a barrier, the providers in this study reported that rural doctors are adept at using the telephone/teleconferencing and facsimile. A preference for a traditional approach can reflect a lack of interest in learning computer skills or difficulty acquiring this skill set.
These results raise issues in the domains of policy, funding priorities, and education and training. This indicates an inter-related set of challenges that would require a targeted multifaceted approach to address. The results suggest that not using telemedicine is, in the current climate, a rational response--it is quicker, easier and more cost-effective not to use telemedicine.
与澳大利亚城市居民相比,农村和偏远地区居民的健康状况持续较差,令人担忧。利用先进技术改善医疗服务的可及性,有可能有助于解决这一问题。远程医疗就是这样一种技术,它在增加医疗服务可及性或提供以前无法获得的服务方面的能力已得到迅速发展。增加医疗服务可及性的重要预期益处是改善健康结果和实现更具成本效益的服务提供。
开展了一项全国性研究,从用户和提供者的角度调查当前对远程医疗的认知使用情况和有用性,以及他们对澳大利亚如何扩大远程医疗的看法。在这项全国性研究的一个组成部分中,采用扎根理论方法并通过半结构化访谈收集了远程医疗服务经验丰富的提供者的专家意见,并进行了主题分析。本文报告了该子样本确定的远程医疗采用障碍。
确定的主要障碍包括:资金;时间;基础设施;设备;技能;以及对传统方法的偏好。虽然资金是远程医疗采用的一个众所周知的障碍,但远程医疗咨询所需的额外时间对农村医生的工作量有特殊影响。澳大利亚农村地区相对较差的互联网接入,再加上获取电脑等一些物品存在困难,使得设备成为一个问题。尽管缺乏设备技能被确定为一个障碍,但本研究中的提供者报告称,农村医生擅长使用电话/电话会议和传真。对传统方法的偏好可能反映出对学习计算机技能缺乏兴趣或获取该技能集存在困难。
这些结果在政策、资金优先事项以及教育和培训领域引发了问题。这表明了一系列相互关联的挑战,需要采取有针对性的多方面方法来应对。结果表明,在当前环境下,不使用远程医疗是一种合理的反应——不使用远程医疗更快、更容易且更具成本效益。