Khanal Vishnu, Saurman Emily, Russell Deborah J, Newton Nicki, Coombes Karina, Puruntatameri Alexandar, Norris Sarah, Huben Amy von, Cockyane Tamsin, Burgess Paul, Wakerman John, Shaw Timothy
Remote Health Systems and Climate Change Centre, Menzies School of Health Research, Charles Darwin University, Alice Springs, Australia.
Sydney School of Public Health, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
JMIR Res Protoc. 2025 Sep 17;14:e68892. doi: 10.2196/68892.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (Indigenous) peoples living in remote Australia experience a heavy burden of ill health and multiple barriers to accessing health care. Digital health technologies (DHTs) have the potential to help overcome some of these challenges and increase access to comprehensive primary health care (CPHC), thereby improving equity of health outcomes. However, little is known about the community and provider preferences for the use of digital technologies for improving health and wellness.
The study aims to co-design, implement, and evaluate how DHTs can improve access to CPHC in remote Indigenous communities in the Northern Territory (NT), Australia.
This multiphased project will take a participatory action research approach to co-design and optimize digital health solutions with local community members and health service staff in 2 communities. Our mixed methods approach will include pre- and postimplementation focus group discussions, interviews, quantitative analysis of CPHC utilization administrative data, and surveys administered by Indigenous community-based researchers to understand the use of digital devices and connectivity, eHealth literacy, preferences for different attributes of DHTs using best-worst scaling, and consumer satisfaction and experiences with DHT interventions. Priority DHTs will be selected for implementation based on consumer and health staff preferences. Focus group discussions and interview data will explore community and health service staff preferences, experiences, and satisfaction with implemented DHTs. A realist approach will be taken to identify how DHT interventions work, for whom, and in what circumstances, so that the understanding of why some interventions work while others do not is expanded. Economic analyses will be conducted to calculate the incremental costs and benefits of implemented DHT interventions. The scalability of digital health solutions will be tested in two additional communities. Project partners include key funding, service, and support agencies in the NT and nationally.
As of November 2024, we have selected two implementation sites. Digital health initiatives are underway at the implementation sites, and evaluation activities are progressing. The initial findings from these sites have informed our scalability assessment in an additional two sites.
Knowledge translation is integral to the study design, which involves partnering with consumers, CPHC service providers, and a range of key stakeholders to inform health service providers and policy makers about which DHTs work for which groups of consumers, and under what circumstances, to improve access to CPHC. This unique study will accommodate consumer and provider preferences regarding the use of DHTs to improve CPHC access and address the lack of knowledge about how to deploy digital solutions to best support CPHC in remote Indigenous Australia.
INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): DERR1-10.2196/68892.
生活在澳大利亚偏远地区的原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民(土著居民)面临着沉重的健康负担以及获取医疗保健的多重障碍。数字健康技术(DHTs)有潜力帮助克服其中一些挑战,并增加获得全面初级卫生保健(CPHC)的机会,从而改善健康结果的公平性。然而,对于社区和医疗服务提供者在使用数字技术改善健康和福祉方面的偏好知之甚少。
本研究旨在共同设计、实施和评估数字健康技术如何改善澳大利亚北领地(NT)偏远土著社区获得全面初级卫生保健的机会。
这个多阶段项目将采用参与式行动研究方法,与两个社区的当地社区成员和卫生服务人员共同设计并优化数字健康解决方案。我们的混合方法将包括实施前和实施后的焦点小组讨论、访谈、对全面初级卫生保健利用管理数据的定量分析,以及由基于土著社区的研究人员进行的调查,以了解数字设备的使用和连接情况、电子健康素养、使用最佳 - 最差尺度法对数字健康技术不同属性的偏好,以及消费者对数字健康技术干预措施的满意度和体验。将根据消费者和卫生工作人员的偏好选择优先实施的数字健康技术。焦点小组讨论和访谈数据将探讨社区和卫生服务人员对已实施数字健康技术的偏好、体验和满意度。将采用现实主义方法来确定数字健康技术干预措施如何发挥作用、针对哪些人群以及在何种情况下发挥作用,从而扩展对为何某些干预措施有效而其他措施无效的理解。将进行经济分析以计算已实施数字健康技术干预措施的增量成本和效益。数字健康解决方案的可扩展性将在另外两个社区进行测试。项目合作伙伴包括北领地及全国范围内的主要资助、服务和支持机构。
截至2024年11月,我们已选定两个实施地点。实施地点的数字健康倡议正在进行,评估活动也在推进。这些地点的初步研究结果为我们在另外两个地点的可扩展性评估提供了参考。
知识转化是研究设计不可或缺的一部分,这涉及与消费者、全面初级卫生保健服务提供者以及一系列关键利益相关者合作,以便向卫生服务提供者和政策制定者通报哪些数字健康技术适用于哪些消费者群体以及在何种情况下适用,以改善获得全面初级卫生保健的机会。这项独特的研究将考虑消费者和提供者在使用数字健康技术改善获得全面初级卫生保健机会方面的偏好,并解决在如何部署数字解决方案以最佳支持澳大利亚偏远地区土著居民的全面初级卫生保健方面缺乏相关知识的问题。
国际注册报告标识符(IRRID):DERR1 - 10.2196/68892。