Kim Sung Wook, Madan Jason, Dritsaki Melina, Bryce Carol, Forjaz Vera, Fraser Joe, Griffiths Frances, Hamilton Kathryn, Huxley Caroline, Sturt Jackie
Division of Health Sciences, Warwick Medical School, The University of Warwick, Coventry, United Kingdom.
Oxford Clinical Trials Research Unit, Botnar Research Centre, Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics, Rheumatology and Musculoskeletal Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
JMIR Med Inform. 2018 Oct 30;6(4):e48. doi: 10.2196/medinform.9577.
Since the introduction of digital health technologies in National Health Service (NHS), health professionals are starting to use email, text, and other digital methods to consult with their patients in a timely manner. There is lack of evidence regarding the economic impact of digital consulting in the United Kingdom (UK) NHS.
This study aimed to estimate the direct costs associated with digital consulting as an adjunct to routine care at 18 clinics serving young people aged 16-24 years with long-term conditions.
This study uses both quantitative and qualitative approaches. Semistructured interviews were conducted with 173 clinical team members on the impacts of digital consulting. A structured questionnaire was developed and used for 115 health professionals across 12 health conditions at 18 sites in the United Kingdom to collect data on time and other resources used for digital consulting. A follow-up semistructured interview was conducted with a single senior clinician at each site to clarify the mechanisms through which digital consulting use might lead to outcomes relevant to economic evaluation. We used the two-part model to see the association between the time spent on digital consulting and the job role of staff, type of clinic, and the average length of the working hours using digital consulting.
When estimated using the two-part model, consultants spent less time on digital consulting compared with nurses (95.48 minutes; P<.001), physiotherapists (55.3 minutes; P<.001), and psychologists (31.67 minutes; P<.001). Part-time staff spent less time using digital consulting than full-time staff despite insignificant result (P=.15). Time spent on digital consulting differed across sites, and no clear pattern in using digital consulting was found. Health professionals qualitatively identified the following 4 potential economic impacts for the NHS: decreasing adverse events, improving patient well-being, decreasing wait lists, and staff workload. We did not find evidence to suggest that the clinical condition was associated with digital consulting use.
Nurses and physiotherapists were the greatest users of digital consulting. Teams appear to use an efficient triage system with the most expensive members digitally consulting less than lower-paid team members. Staff report showed concerns regarding time spent digitally consulting, which implies that direct costs increase. There remain considerable gaps in evidence related to cost-effectiveness of digital consulting, but this study has highlighted important cost-related outcomes for assessment in future cost-effectiveness trials of digital consulting.
自数字健康技术引入英国国民医疗服务体系(NHS)以来,医疗专业人员开始使用电子邮件、短信及其他数字方式及时与患者进行咨询沟通。目前尚缺乏关于英国NHS中数字咨询的经济影响的证据。
本研究旨在估算18家为16 - 24岁患有长期疾病的年轻人提供服务的诊所将数字咨询作为常规护理辅助手段的直接成本。
本研究采用定量和定性方法。对173名临床团队成员进行了关于数字咨询影响的半结构化访谈。开发了一份结构化问卷,并用于英国18个地点12种健康状况的115名医疗专业人员,以收集用于数字咨询的时间及其他资源的数据。对每个地点的一名资深临床医生进行了后续半结构化访谈,以阐明数字咨询使用可能导致与经济评估相关结果的机制。我们使用两部分模型来观察数字咨询所花费时间与工作人员的工作角色、诊所类型以及使用数字咨询的平均工作时长之间的关联。
使用两部分模型估算时,与护士(95.48分钟;P <.001)、物理治疗师(55.3分钟;P <.001)和心理学家(31.67分钟;P <.001)相比,顾问在数字咨询上花费的时间较少。兼职人员使用数字咨询的时间比全职人员少,尽管结果不显著(P = 0.15)。不同地点在数字咨询上花费的时间不同,且未发现使用数字咨询的明确模式。医疗专业人员从定性角度确定了NHS的以下4种潜在经济影响:减少不良事件、改善患者福祉、减少等候名单以及减轻工作人员工作量。我们没有找到证据表明临床状况与数字咨询的使用有关。
护士和物理治疗师是数字咨询的最大用户。各团队似乎使用了一种高效的分诊系统,费用最高的成员进行数字咨询的次数少于薪酬较低的团队成员。工作人员报告显示对数字咨询所花费时间存在担忧,这意味着直接成本增加。在数字咨询的成本效益相关证据方面仍存在相当大的差距,但本研究突出了重要的成本相关结果,以供未来数字咨询成本效益试验进行评估。