Implementation of digital remote postoperative monitoring in routine practice: a qualitative study of barriers and facilitators.

IF 3.3 3区 医学 Q2 MEDICAL INFORMATICS BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making Pub Date : 2024-10-21 DOI:10.1186/s12911-024-02670-5
Kenneth A McLean, Alessandro Sgrò, Leo R Brown, Louis F Buijs, Kirsty Mozolowski, Luke Daines, Kathrin Cresswell, Mark A Potter, Matt-Mouley Bouamrane, Ewen M Harrison
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Abstract

Introduction: Remote monitoring can strengthen postoperative care in the community and minimise the burden of complications. However, implementation requires a clear understanding of how to sustainably integrate such complex interventions into existing care pathways. This study aimed to explore perceptions of potential facilitators and barriers to the implementation of digital remote postoperative monitoring from key stakeholders and derive recommendations for an implementable service.

Methods: A qualitative implementation study was conducted of digital remote postoperative wound monitoring across two UK tertiary care hospitals. All enrolled patients undergoing general surgery, and all staff involved in postoperative care were eligible. Criterion-based purposeful sampling was used to select stakeholders for semi-structured interviews on their perspectives and experiences of digital remote postoperative monitoring. A theory-informed deductive-inductive qualitative analysis was conducted; drawing on normalisation process theory (NPT) to determine facilitators for and barriers to implementation within routine care.

Results: There were 28 semi-structured interviews conducted with patients (n = 14) and healthcare professionals (n = 14). Remote postoperative monitoring was perceived to fulfil an unmet need in facilitating the diagnosis and treatment of postoperative complications. Participants perceived clear benefit to both the delivery of health services, and patient outcomes and experience, but some were concerned that this may not be equally shared due to potential issues with accessibility. The COVID-19 pandemic demonstrated telemedicine services are feasible to deliver and acceptable to participants, with examples of nurse-led remote postoperative monitoring currently supported within local care pathways. However, there was a discrepancy between patients' expectations regarding digital health to provide more personalised care, and the capacity of healthcare staff to deliver on these. Without further investment into IT infrastructure and allocation of staff, healthcare staff felt remote postoperative monitoring should be prioritised only for patients at the highest risk of complications.

Conclusion: The COVID-19 pandemic has sparked the digital transformation of international health systems, yet the potential of digital health interventions has yet to be realised. The benefits to stakeholders are clear, and if health systems seek to meet governmental policy and patient expectations, there needs to be greater organisational strategy and investment to ensure appropriate deployment and adoption into routine care.

Trial registration: NCT05069103.

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在常规实践中实施数字化远程术后监护:一项关于障碍和促进因素的定性研究。
介绍:远程监控可以加强社区的术后护理,最大限度地减轻并发症的负担。然而,在实施过程中需要清楚地了解如何将这种复杂的干预措施可持续地整合到现有的护理路径中。本研究旨在探讨主要利益相关者对实施数字化远程术后监护的潜在促进因素和障碍的看法,并为可实施的服务提出建议:在英国两家三级医院开展了一项关于术后数字远程伤口监测的定性实施研究。所有接受普通外科手术的患者和所有参与术后护理的员工均符合条件。研究人员采用基于标准的有目的抽样方法,选择相关人员进行半结构化访谈,了解他们对数字化远程术后监测的看法和经验。在理论指导下进行了演绎-归纳定性分析;借鉴规范化过程理论(NPT),确定在常规护理中实施的促进因素和障碍:对患者(14 人)和医护人员(14 人)进行了 28 次半结构式访谈。他们认为远程术后监测能满足未被满足的需求,促进术后并发症的诊断和治疗。参与者认为这对医疗服务的提供以及患者的治疗效果和体验都有明显的益处,但有些人担心由于潜在的可及性问题,这种益处可能不会被平等分享。COVID-19 大流行表明,远程医疗服务的提供是可行的,参与者也可以接受,目前在当地护理路径中支持由护士主导的远程术后监测。然而,患者对数字医疗提供更加个性化护理的期望与医护人员实现这些期望的能力之间存在差异。如果不对信息技术基础设施和人员分配进行进一步投资,医护人员认为远程术后监测只应优先用于并发症风险最高的患者:COVID-19大流行引发了国际医疗系统的数字化转型,但数字化医疗干预措施的潜力仍有待发挥。对利益相关者的益处显而易见,如果医疗系统想要满足政府政策和患者的期望,就需要加大组织战略和投资力度,以确保在常规护理中适当部署和采用:试验注册:NCT05069103。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.20
自引率
5.70%
发文量
297
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making is an open access journal publishing original peer-reviewed research articles in relation to the design, development, implementation, use, and evaluation of health information technologies and decision-making for human health.
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