Vilendrer Stacie, Sackeyfio Sarah, Akinbami Eliel, Ghosh Roy, Luu Jacklyn Ha, Pathak Divya, Shimada Masahiro, Williamson Emmanuelle Elise, Shieh Lisa
Division of Primary Care and Population Health, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, United States.
Department of Physics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States.
JMIR Form Res. 2022 Mar 30;6(3):e32933. doi: 10.2196/32933.
Telemedicine has been adopted in the inpatient setting to facilitate clinical interactions between on-site clinicians and isolated hospitalized patients. Such remote interactions have the potential to reduce pathogen exposure and use of personal protective equipment but may also pose new safety concerns given prior evidence that isolated patients can receive suboptimal care. Formal evaluations of the use and practical acceptance of inpatient telemedicine among hospitalized patients are lacking.
We aimed to evaluate the experience of patients hospitalized for COVID-19 with inpatient telemedicine introduced as an infection control measure during the pandemic.
We conducted a qualitative evaluation in a COVID-19 designated non-intensive care hospital unit at a large academic health center (Stanford Health Care) from October 2020 through January 2021. Semistructured qualitative interviews focused on patient experience, impact on quality of care, communication, and mental health. Purposive sampling was used to recruit participants representing diversity across varying demographics until thematic saturation was reached. Interview transcripts were qualitatively analyzed using an inductive-deductive approach.
Interviews with 20 hospitalized patients suggested that nonemergency clinical care and bridging to in-person care comprised the majority of inpatient telemedicine use. Nurses were reported to enter the room and call on the tablet far more frequently than physicians, who typically entered the room at least daily. Patients reported broad acceptance of the technology, citing improved convenience and reduced anxiety, but preferred in-person care where possible. Quality of care was believed to be similar to in-person care with the exception of a few patients who wanted more frequent in-person examinations. Ongoing challenges included low audio volume, shifting tablet location, and inconsistent verbal introductions from the clinical team.
Patient experiences with inpatient telemedicine were largely favorable. Although most patients expressed a preference for in-person care, telemedicine was acceptable given the circumstances associated with the COVID-19 pandemic. Improvements in technical and care team use may enhance acceptability. Further evaluation is needed to understand the impact of inpatient telemedicine and the optimal balance between in-person and virtual care in the hospital setting.
远程医疗已应用于住院环境,以促进现场临床医生与隔离住院患者之间的临床互动。这种远程互动有可能减少病原体暴露和个人防护设备的使用,但鉴于先前有证据表明隔离患者可能接受的护理不够理想,也可能带来新的安全问题。目前缺乏对住院患者使用住院远程医疗及其实际接受情况的正式评估。
我们旨在评估在大流行期间作为感染控制措施引入住院远程医疗后,因 COVID-19 住院患者的体验。
2020 年 10 月至 2021 年 1 月,我们在一家大型学术健康中心(斯坦福医疗保健)的 COVID-19 指定非重症监护病房进行了定性评估。半结构化定性访谈聚焦于患者体验、对护理质量的影响、沟通和心理健康。采用目的抽样法招募代表不同人口统计学特征的参与者,直至达到主题饱和。访谈记录采用归纳 - 演绎法进行定性分析。
对 20 名住院患者的访谈表明,非紧急临床护理和过渡到面对面护理构成了住院远程医疗使用的大部分。据报告,护士进入病房并通过平板电脑呼叫的频率比医生高得多,医生通常至少每天进入病房一次。患者报告对该技术广泛接受,称其便利性提高且焦虑感降低,但尽可能更喜欢面对面护理。除了少数希望更频繁进行面对面检查的患者外,患者认为护理质量与面对面护理相似。持续存在的挑战包括音量低、平板电脑位置移动以及临床团队口头介绍不一致。
患者对住院远程医疗的体验总体良好。尽管大多数患者表示更喜欢面对面护理,但鉴于与 COVID-19 大流行相关的情况,远程医疗是可以接受的。技术和护理团队使用方面的改进可能会提高可接受性。需要进一步评估以了解住院远程医疗的影响以及医院环境中面对面护理和虚拟护理之间的最佳平衡。