Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, Department of Health and Caring Sciences, Linnaeus University, Universitetsplatsen 1, Kalmar/Växjö, 392 31, Sweden.
Department of Learning Informatics Management and Ethics, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2023 Jun 6;23(1):581. doi: 10.1186/s12913-023-09428-1.
Chronic diseases are increasing worldwide, and the complexity of disease management is putting new demands on safe healthcare. Telemonitoring technology has the potential to improve self-care management with the support of healthcare professionals for people with chronic diseases living at home. Patient safety threats related to telemonitoring and how they may affect patients' and healthcare professionals' sense of security need attention. This study aimed to explore patients' and healthcare professionals' experiences of safety and sense of security when using telemonitoring of chronic conditions at home.
Semi-structured interviews were conducted with twenty patients and nine healthcare professionals (nurses and physicians), recruited from four primary healthcare centers and one medical department in a region in southern Sweden using telemonitoring service for chronic conditions in home healthcare.
The main theme was that experiences of safety and a sense of security were intertwined and relied on patients´ and healthcare professionals´ mutual engagement in telemonitoring and managing symptoms together. Telemonitoring was perceived to increase symptom awareness and promote early detection of deterioration promoting patient safety. A sense of security emerged through having someone keeping track of symptoms and comprised aspects of availability, shared responsibility, technical confidence, and empowering patients in self-management. The meeting with technology changed healthcare professionals' work processes, and patients' daily routines, creating patient safety risks if combined with low health- and digital literacy and a naïve reliance on technology. Empowering patients' self-management ability and improving shared understanding of the patient's health status and symptom management were prerequisites for safe care and the patient´s sense of security.
Telemonitoring chronic conditions in the homecare context can promote a sense of security when care is co-created in a mutual understanding and responsibility. Attentiveness to the patient's health literacy, symptom management, and health-related safety behavior when using eHealth technology may enlighten and mitigate latent patient safety risks. A systems approach indicates that patient safety risks related to telemonitoring are not only associated with the patient's and healthcare professionals functioning and behavior or the human-technology interaction. Mitigating patient safety risks are likely also dependent on the complex management of home health and social care service.
慢性病在全球范围内呈上升趋势,疾病管理的复杂性对安全医疗提出了新的要求。远程监测技术有可能通过医疗专业人员的支持,改善慢性病患者在家中的自我护理管理。与远程监测相关的患者安全威胁,以及它们可能如何影响患者和医疗专业人员的安全感,需要引起关注。本研究旨在探讨患者和医疗专业人员在家中使用远程监测慢性病时的安全和安全感体验。
采用半结构式访谈,从瑞典南部一个地区的四个初级保健中心和一个医疗部门招募了 20 名患者和 9 名医疗保健专业人员(护士和医生),他们使用远程监测服务在家中进行慢性病监测。
主要主题是安全和安全感体验是相互交织的,依赖于患者和医疗保健专业人员在远程监测和共同管理症状方面的相互参与。远程监测被认为可以提高症状意识,并促进对病情恶化的早期发现,从而提高患者安全性。安全感是通过有人跟踪症状而产生的,包括可用性、共同责任、技术信心和赋予患者自我管理能力等方面。技术的引入改变了医疗保健专业人员的工作流程和患者的日常生活,如果与低健康和数字素养以及对技术的盲目依赖相结合,就会产生患者安全风险。赋予患者自我管理能力并提高对患者健康状况和症状管理的共同理解是安全护理和患者安全感的前提条件。
在家中护理环境中对慢性病进行远程监测可以在相互理解和共同承担责任的基础上促进安全感。关注患者的健康素养、症状管理和使用电子健康技术时与健康相关的安全行为,可以为潜在的患者安全风险提供启示并加以减轻。系统方法表明,与远程监测相关的患者安全风险不仅与患者和医疗保健专业人员的功能和行为或人机交互有关,还可能取决于家庭健康和社会护理服务的复杂管理。