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Twenty-first century house calls: a survey of ambulatory care providers to inform organisational telehealth strategy

While patient interest in telehealth increases, clinicians' perspectives may influence longer-term adoption. We sought to identify facilitators and barriers to continued clinician incorporation of telehealth into practice. A cross-sectional 24-item web-based survey was emailed to 491 providers...

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Published in:BMJ health & care informatics 2022-12, Vol.29 (1), p.e100626
Main Authors: Holt, Jeana M, Cusatis, Rachel, Mortensen, Natalie, Wolfrath, Nathan, Hyun, Noorie, Winn, Aaron N, Brown, Sherry-Ann, Somai, Melek M, Crotty, Bradley H
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creator Holt, Jeana M
Cusatis, Rachel
Mortensen, Natalie
Wolfrath, Nathan
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Brown, Sherry-Ann
Somai, Melek M
Crotty, Bradley H
description While patient interest in telehealth increases, clinicians' perspectives may influence longer-term adoption. We sought to identify facilitators and barriers to continued clinician incorporation of telehealth into practice. A cross-sectional 24-item web-based survey was emailed to 491 providers with ≥50 video visits (VVs) within an academic health system between 1 March 2020 and 31 December 2020. We quantitatively summarised the characteristics and perceptions of respondents by using descriptive and test statistics. We used systematic content analysis to qualitatively code open-ended responses, double coding at least 25%. 247 providers (50.3%) responded to the survey. Seventy-nine per cent were confident in their ability to deliver excellent clinical care through VV. In comparison, 48% were confident in their ability to troubleshoot technical issues. Most clinicians (87%) expressed various concerns about VV. Providers across specialties generally agreed that VV reduced infection risk (71%) and transportation barriers (71%). Three overarching themes in the qualitative data included infrastructure and training, usefulness and expectation setting for patients and providers. As healthcare systems plan for future delivery directions, they must address the tension between patients' and providers' expectations of care within the digital space. Telehealth creates new friction, one where the healthcare system must fit into the patient's life rather than the usual dynamic of the patient fitting into the healthcare system. Telehealth infrastructure and patient and clinician technological acumen continue to evolve. Clinicians in this survey offered valuable insights into the directions healthcare organisations can take to right-size this healthcare delivery modality.
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source BMJ Open Access Journals; PubMed (Medline)
subjects Ambulatory Care
Confidence
COVID-19
Cross-Sectional Studies
Electronic health records
Gynecology
Health care access
Health care networks
House Calls
Humans
Internal medicine
Medicine
Original Research
Pandemics
Patient satisfaction
Patient-centered care
Primary care
Reimbursement
Surveys and Questionnaires
Telemedicine
Trouble shooting
Web portals
title Twenty-first century house calls: a survey of ambulatory care providers to inform organisational telehealth strategy
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