Royal Brompton Hospital, London, UK.
Imperial College, London, UK.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2023 Aug 10;23(1):847. doi: 10.1186/s12913-023-09872-z.
Prior to the Covid-19 pandemic, heart failure (HF) disease management programmes were predominantly delivered in-person, with telemedicine being uncommon. Covid-19 resulted in a rapid shift to "remote-by-default" clinic appointments in many organisations. We evaluated clinician and patient experiences of teleconsultations for HF.
From 16th March 2020, all HF appointments at a specialist centre in the UK were telemedicine-by-default through a mixture of telephone and video consultations, with rare in-person appointments. HF clinicians and patients with HF were invited to participate in semi-structured interviews about their experiences. A purposive sampling technique was used. Interviews were conducted using Microsoft Teams®, recorded and transcribed verbatim. Narrative data were explored by thematic analysis. Clinicians and patients were interviewed until themes saturated.
Eight clinicians and eight patients with HF were interviewed before themes saturated. Five overarching themes emerged: 1) Time utilisation - telemedicine consultations saved patients time travelling to and waiting for appointments. Clinicians perceived them to be more efficient, but more administrative time was involved. 2) Clinical assessment - without physical examination, clinicians relied more on history, observations and test results; video calls were perceived as superior to telephone calls for remote assessment. Patients confident in self-monitoring tended to be more comfortable with telemedicine. 3) Communication and rapport - clinicians experienced difficulty establishing rapport with new patients by telephone, though video was better. Patients generally did not perceive that remote consultation affected their rapport with clinicians. 4) Technology - connection issues occasionally disrupted video consultations, but overall patients and clinicians found the technology easy to use. 5) Choice and flexibility - both patients and clinicians believed that the choice of modality should be situation-dependent.
Telemedicine HF consultations were more convenient for patients, saved them time, and were generally acceptable to clinicians, but changed workflows, consultation dynamics, and how clinical assessment was performed. Telemedicine should be used alongside in-person appointments in a "hybrid" model tailored to individual patients and settings.
在新冠疫情之前,心力衰竭(HF)疾病管理计划主要以面对面的方式进行,远程医疗并不常见。新冠疫情导致许多组织迅速将“默认远程”诊所预约变为现实。我们评估了远程 HF 咨询对临床医生和患者的体验。
从 2020 年 3 月 16 日起,英国一家专业中心的所有 HF 预约都通过电话和视频咨询的混合方式默认进行远程医疗,很少有面对面的预约。HF 临床医生和 HF 患者被邀请参加关于他们体验的半结构化访谈。采用了目的性抽样技术。使用 Microsoft Teams®进行访谈,录音并逐字记录。通过主题分析探索叙事数据。临床医生和患者的访谈直到主题饱和为止。
在主题饱和之前,对 8 名临床医生和 8 名 HF 患者进行了访谈。出现了 5 个总体主题:1)时间利用 - 远程医疗咨询使患者节省了往返和等待预约的时间。临床医生认为它们更有效率,但涉及更多的行政时间。2)临床评估 - 在没有体格检查的情况下,临床医生更多地依赖病史、观察和检查结果;视频通话被认为比电话更适合远程评估。对自我监测有信心的患者往往更能接受远程医疗。3)沟通和融洽关系 - 临床医生通过电话与新患者建立融洽关系存在困难,而视频则更好。患者通常不认为远程咨询会影响他们与临床医生的融洽关系。4)技术 - 连接问题偶尔会中断视频咨询,但总体而言,患者和临床医生发现该技术易于使用。5)选择和灵活性 - 患者和临床医生都认为,模式的选择应取决于具体情况。
HF 远程医疗咨询对患者更方便,为他们节省时间,并且普遍被临床医生接受,但改变了工作流程、咨询动态以及临床评估的方式。远程医疗应该与面对面的预约一起使用,以针对个人患者和环境量身定制的“混合”模式。