Marshfield Clinic Research Institute, National Farm Medicine Center, Marshfield, WI, United States.
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Health Informatics, Milwaukee, WI, United States.
JMIR Mhealth Uhealth. 2019 Nov 8;7(11):e11915. doi: 10.2196/11915.
Mobile health (mHealth) technology dissemination has penetrated rural and urban areas alike. Yet, health care organization oversight and clinician adoption have not kept pace with patient use. mHealth could have a unique impact on health and quality of life for rural populations. If organizations are prepared to manage mHealth, clinicians may improve the quality of care for their patients, both rural and urban. However, many organizations are not yet prepared to prescribe or prohibit third-party mHealth technologies.
This study explored organizational readiness for rural mHealth adoption, the use of patient-reported data by clinical care teams, and potential impact on improving rural health care delivery.
Semistructured, open-ended interviews were used to investigate clinicians' current practices, motivators, and perceived barriers to their use of mHealth technologies in rural settings.
A total of 13 clinicians were interviewed, and 53.8% (7/13) reported encouraging use of mHealth apps or wearable devices with rural patients. Perceived barriers to adoption were categorized into three primary themes: (1) personal (clinician), (2) patient, and (3) organizational. Organizational was most prominent, with subcodes of time, uniformity, and policy or direction. Thematic analysis revealed code-category linkages that identify the complex nature of a rural health care organization's current climate from a clinician's perspective. A thematic map was developed to visualize the flow from category to code. Identified linkages guided the development of a refined rural mHealth readiness model.
Clinicians (including physicians) have limited time for continuing education, research, or exploration of emerging technologies. Clinicians are motivated to learn more, but they need guidance through organization-led directives. Rural health care institutions should consider investing in mHealth analysis, tool development, and formal recommendations of sanctioned tools for clinicians to use with patients.
移动医疗(mHealth)技术的传播已经深入到城乡地区。然而,医疗保健机构的监督和临床医生的采用并没有跟上患者的使用步伐。mHealth 可能会对农村人口的健康和生活质量产生独特的影响。如果组织准备管理 mHealth,临床医生可以提高他们对农村和城市患者的护理质量。然而,许多组织还没有准备好开处方或禁止第三方 mHealth 技术。
本研究探讨了农村 mHealth 采用的组织准备情况、临床护理团队使用患者报告数据的情况,以及对改善农村医疗服务提供的潜在影响。
采用半结构化、开放式访谈的方法,调查了临床医生在农村地区使用 mHealth 技术的当前实践、动机和感知障碍。
共采访了 13 名临床医生,其中 53.8%(7/13)报告鼓励农村患者使用 mHealth 应用程序或可穿戴设备。采用的障碍分为三个主要主题:(1)个人(临床医生),(2)患者,和(3)组织。组织问题最为突出,其下有时间、一致性和政策或方向等子代码。主题分析揭示了代码类别之间的联系,从临床医生的角度识别出农村医疗保健组织当前环境的复杂性。制作了一张主题地图,以可视化从类别到代码的流程。确定的联系为农村 mHealth 准备度模型的发展提供了指导。
临床医生(包括医生)用于继续教育、研究或探索新兴技术的时间有限。临床医生有学习更多的动力,但他们需要通过组织领导的指令来获得指导。农村医疗保健机构应考虑投资 mHealth 分析、工具开发,并为临床医生正式推荐可用于患者的工具。