Davis Melinda M, Freeman Michele, Kaye Jeffrey, Vuckovic Nancy, Buckley David I
1 Oregon Rural Practice-Based Research Network, Oregon Health & Science University , Portland, Oregon.
Telemed J E Health. 2014 May;20(5):428-38. doi: 10.1089/tmj.2013.0166. Epub 2014 Apr 14.
Remote monitoring technology (RMT) may enhance healthcare quality and reduce costs. RMT adoption depends on perceptions of the end-user (e.g., patients, caregivers, healthcare providers). We conducted a systematic review exploring the acceptability and feasibility of RMT use in routine adult patient care, from the perspectives of primary care clinicians, administrators, and clinic staff.
We searched the databases of Medline, IEEE Xplore, and Compendex for original articles published from January 1996 through February 2013. We manually screened bibliographies of pertinent studies and consulted experts to identify English-language studies meeting our inclusion criteria.
Of 939 citations identified, 15 studies reported in 16 publications met inclusion criteria. Studies were heterogeneous by country, type of RMT used, patient and provider characteristics, and method of implementation and evaluation. Clinicians, staff, and administrators generally held positive views about RMTs. Concerns emerged regarding clinical relevance of RMT data, changing clinical roles and patterns of care (e.g., reduced quality of care from fewer patient visits, overtreatment), insufficient staffing or time to monitor and discuss RMT data, data incompatibility with a clinic's electronic health record (EHR), and unclear legal liability regarding response protocols.
This small body of heterogeneous literature suggests that for RMTs to be adopted in primary care, researchers and developers must ensure clinical relevance, support adequate infrastructure, streamline data transmission into EHR systems, attend to changing care patterns and professional roles, and clarify response protocols. There is a critical need to engage end-users in the development and implementation of RMT.
远程监测技术(RMT)可能会提高医疗质量并降低成本。RMT的采用取决于最终用户(如患者、护理人员、医疗服务提供者)的认知。我们进行了一项系统综述,从初级保健临床医生、管理人员和诊所工作人员的角度探讨RMT在成人患者常规护理中使用的可接受性和可行性。
我们检索了Medline、IEEE Xplore和Compendex数据库,查找1996年1月至2013年2月发表的原始文章。我们手动筛选相关研究的参考文献,并咨询专家以确定符合我们纳入标准的英文研究。
在识别出的939篇文献中,16篇出版物中报道的15项研究符合纳入标准。这些研究在国家、使用的RMT类型、患者和提供者特征以及实施和评估方法方面存在差异。临床医生、工作人员和管理人员对RMT普遍持积极看法。出现了一些担忧,包括RMT数据的临床相关性、护理的临床角色和模式变化(如患者就诊减少导致护理质量下降、过度治疗)、监测和讨论RMT数据的人员配备或时间不足、数据与诊所电子健康记录(EHR)不兼容以及关于响应协议的法律责任不明确。
这一小部分异质性文献表明,要在初级保健中采用RMT,研究人员和开发者必须确保临床相关性、支持适当的基础设施、简化数据传输到EHR系统、关注护理模式和专业角色的变化,并明确响应协议。迫切需要让最终用户参与RMT的开发和实施。