Dermody Gordana, Wadsworth Daniel, El Haddad May, Prichard Roslyn, Benson Alex, Benson Tim, Craswell Alison
University of the Sunshine Coast, Sippy Downs, Queensland, Australia.
R-Outcomes Ltd, Newbury, UK.
J Adv Nurs. 2025 Aug 5. doi: 10.1111/jan.70105.
The aim of this study was to explore the digital health technology readiness of nurses, nursing students, nurse-academics, and nurses in leadership roles. Workforce digital readiness impacts the adoption of digital health technologies and quality and safety outcomes. This study sought to identify key factors affecting nurses' readiness for specific digital health technologies and provide recommendations to accelerate readiness levels in alignment with rapidly advancing digital health technologies.
Cross-sectional multi-method study.
An online survey was followed by semi-structured interviews. Survey data (N = 160) were analysed using descriptive and inferential statistics, whereas qualitative responses (N = 8 interviews, 43 open-ended responses) were thematically analysed.
Participants were confident regarding openness to innovation, reporting highest confidence Levels around telehealth, wearable devices, and information technology. The lowest confidence scores were seen in health smart homes technology, followed by health applications, social media, patient online resources, and EHRs. Four themes were developed from the qualitative interviews including 'opportunities for efficient ways of working', 'digital technology turning experts into novices', 'disillusionment between expectation and reality' and 'shared responsibility for development of digital expertise'. Open-ended data was focused on the need for comprehensive education, ongoing support, and infrastructure improvements to prepare healthcare professionals for digital health environments.
Notable findings include age-related differences, the need for shared responsibility in workforce preparation, and a link between problem-solving ability and help-seeking.
IMPLICATIONS FOR THE PROFESSION AND/OR PATIENT CARE: Low confidence among nurses around the use of digital health technologies such as electronic health records, in-home monitoring technology, and other wearable technologies could impact adoption readiness. Because patient safety is increasingly and inextricably linked to digital health technologies, nurses must not only be digital health literate but also included in the design and implementation process of these technologies.
This study adhered to the Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) guidelines for the reporting of cross-sectional survey research, and the Consolidated Criteria for Reporting Qualitative (COREQ) research guidelines.
Limited patient and public involvement was incorporated, focusing on feedback from digital health researchers and practitioner-academics during the academic peer review process. Their insights informed the clarity and relevance of the survey design and data interpretation, ensuring alignment with real-world workforce development priorities in nursing.
本研究旨在探讨护士、护生、护士学者以及担任领导职务的护士对数字健康技术的准备情况。劳动力数字准备情况会影响数字健康技术的采用以及质量和安全结果。本研究旨在确定影响护士对特定数字健康技术准备情况的关键因素,并提供建议,以根据快速发展的数字健康技术加快准备水平。
横断面多方法研究。
先进行在线调查,随后进行半结构化访谈。使用描述性和推断性统计分析调查数据(N = 160),对定性回答(N = 8次访谈,43条开放式回答)进行主题分析。
参与者对创新持开放态度,对远程医疗、可穿戴设备和信息技术的信心最高。对健康智能家居技术的信心得分最低,其次是健康应用程序、社交媒体、患者在线资源和电子健康记录。定性访谈得出了四个主题,包括“高效工作方式的机会”、“数字技术使专家变成新手”、“期望与现实的幻灭”以及“数字专业知识发展的共同责任”。开放式数据集中在全面教育、持续支持和基础设施改进的需求上,以使医疗保健专业人员为数字健康环境做好准备。
显著发现包括与年龄相关的差异、劳动力准备中共同责任的必要性以及解决问题能力与寻求帮助之间的联系。
对专业和/或患者护理的影响:护士对电子健康记录、家庭监测技术和其他可穿戴技术等数字健康技术的信心较低,可能会影响采用准备情况。由于患者安全与数字健康技术的联系日益紧密且不可分割,护士不仅必须具备数字健康素养,还应参与这些技术的设计和实施过程。
本研究遵循加强流行病学观察性研究报告(STROBE)指南进行横断面调查研究报告,以及定性研究报告综合标准(COREQ)研究指南。
纳入了有限的患者和公众参与,重点是在学术同行评审过程中来自数字健康研究人员和实践学者的反馈。他们的见解为调查设计和数据解释的清晰度及相关性提供了信息,确保与护理领域实际的劳动力发展重点保持一致。