Lennon Marilyn R, Bouamrane Matt-Mouley, Devlin Alison M, O'Connor Siobhan, O'Donnell Catherine, Chetty Ula, Agbakoba Ruth, Bikker Annemieke, Grieve Eleanor, Finch Tracy, Watson Nicholas, Wyke Sally, Mair Frances S
Digital Health and Wellness Group, Computer and Information Sciences, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, United Kingdom.
General Practice and Primary Care, Institute of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom.
J Med Internet Res. 2017 Feb 16;19(2):e42. doi: 10.2196/jmir.6900.
Digital health has the potential to support care delivery for chronic illness. Despite positive evidence from localized implementations, new technologies have proven slow to become accepted, integrated, and routinized at scale.
The aim of our study was to examine barriers and facilitators to implementation of digital health at scale through the evaluation of a £37m national digital health program: ‟Delivering Assisted Living Lifestyles at Scale" (dallas) from 2012-2015.
The study was a longitudinal qualitative, multi-stakeholder, implementation study. The methods included interviews (n=125) with key implementers, focus groups with consumers and patients (n=7), project meetings (n=12), field work or observation in the communities (n=16), health professional survey responses (n=48), and cross program documentary evidence on implementation (n=215). We used a sociological theory called normalization process theory (NPT) and a longitudinal (3 years) qualitative framework analysis approach. This work did not study a single intervention or population. Instead, we evaluated the processes (of designing and delivering digital health), and our outcomes were the identified barriers and facilitators to delivering and mainstreaming services and products within the mixed sector digital health ecosystem.
We identified three main levels of issues influencing readiness for digital health: macro (market, infrastructure, policy), meso (organizational), and micro (professional or public). Factors hindering implementation included: lack of information technology (IT) infrastructure, uncertainty around information governance, lack of incentives to prioritize interoperability, lack of precedence on accountability within the commercial sector, and a market perceived as difficult to navigate. Factors enabling implementation were: clinical endorsement, champions who promoted digital health, and public and professional willingness.
Although there is receptiveness to digital health, barriers to mainstreaming remain. Our findings suggest greater investment in national and local infrastructure, implementation of guidelines for the safe and transparent use and assessment of digital health, incentivization of interoperability, and investment in upskilling of professionals and the public would help support the normalization of digital health. These findings will enable researchers, health care practitioners, and policy makers to understand the current landscape and the actions required in order to prepare the market and accelerate uptake, and use of digital health and wellness services in context and at scale.
数字健康有潜力支持慢性病的护理服务。尽管局部实施取得了积极证据,但新技术在大规模被接受、整合和常规化方面进展缓慢。
我们研究的目的是通过评估一项耗资3700万英镑的国家数字健康计划——“大规模提供辅助生活方式”(达拉斯计划),从2012年至2015年,来审视大规模实施数字健康的障碍和促进因素。
该研究是一项纵向定性、多利益相关方的实施研究。方法包括与关键实施者进行访谈(n = 125)、与消费者和患者进行焦点小组讨论(n = 7)、项目会议(n = 12)、在社区进行实地工作或观察(n = 16)、收集卫生专业人员的调查回复(n = 48)以及跨项目的关于实施的文献证据(n = 215)。我们使用了一种名为规范过程理论(NPT)的社会学理论和纵向(3年)定性框架分析方法。这项工作并非研究单一干预措施或人群。相反,我们评估了(设计和提供数字健康的)过程,我们的结果是确定在混合部门数字健康生态系统中提供和使服务及产品主流化的障碍和促进因素。
我们确定了影响数字健康准备程度的三个主要层面的问题:宏观(市场、基础设施、政策)、中观(组织)和微观(专业人员或公众)。阻碍实施的因素包括:缺乏信息技术(IT)基础设施、信息治理的不确定性、缺乏优先考虑互操作性的激励措施、商业部门内问责制缺乏先例以及被认为难以驾驭的市场。促成实施的因素包括:临床认可、推广数字健康的倡导者以及公众和专业人员的意愿。
尽管对数字健康有接受度,但主流化的障碍仍然存在。我们的研究结果表明,加大对国家和地方基础设施的投资、实施数字健康安全透明使用和评估的指南、激励互操作性以及对专业人员和公众进行技能提升投资,将有助于支持数字健康的规范化。这些研究结果将使研究人员、医疗保健从业者和政策制定者能够了解当前的情况以及为准备市场并加速数字健康和健康服务在实际环境中的大规模采用和使用所需采取的行动。