| Literature DB >> 19578463 |
Abstract
Kiosks can provide patients with access to health systems in public locations, but with increasing home Internet access their usefulness is questioned. A literature and informant review identified kiosks used for taking medical histories, health promotion, self assessment, consumer feedback, patient registration, patient access to records, and remote consultations. Sited correctly with good interfaces, kiosks can be used by all demographics but many 'projects' have failed to become routine practice. A role remains for: (a) integrated kiosks as part of patient 'flow', (b) opportunistic kiosks to catch people's attention. Both require clear 'ownership' to succeed.Entities:
Keywords: Internet; health systems; kiosk
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19578463 PMCID: PMC2705220 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph6061818
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1.Percentage of different age groups in Great Britain who have ever used the Internet (constructed from NOS statistics) [8].
Figure 2.‘First generation’ tablet computer used for patient interviewing in an emergency department in Ontario, Canada [12].
Examples of kiosk use in publications 2002–2008 shown in reverse date order.
| Scottish telepresence project (N = ?1) [ | 2008, Scotland, (R) | Newspaper article about teleconsultation where patient booth. Booth includes stethoscope, blood-pressure cuff and thermometer, works on a standard network & needs about 3.5 megabits per second. |
| Part of cluster RCT in 16 hospitals (so N = 8 intervention). [ | 2007 USA, (O). | Package of interventions to improve antibiotic use in acute respiratory infection: clinical lead, posters, brochures, interactive tailored video kiosk. Modest decrease in antibiotics: but no reporting of kiosk as component. |
| Kiosks in library, government office, and a McDonald’s in low-income urban locations in Seattle Mar to Oct 2005. (N = 3) [ | 2007 USA, (O) | Users entered child age, were shown selected info. McDonald’s most popular. 28% responded exit survey. 48% had less than high school education, 26% had never used the Internet. |
| Picker Institute study of patient feedback on two wards in hospitals in Slough. (N = 2) [ | 2007 UK, (R/O) | Two inpatient wards (surgery/urology and respiratory) |
| Kiosks in aboriginal areas. (N = 11) | 2007 Australia, (O) | To improve health literacy in diabetes, alcohol use and child health for remote indigenous populations in Queensland. |
| Orthopaedic outpatients. (N = 1) [ | 2007 England, (R) | To collect ‘outcome scores’ Oswestry Disability Score from patients |
| Chicago emergency department [ | 2007 USA, (R) | To promote child safety. Received tailored report |
| Different sites in metropolitan St. Louis, Missouri, between June 2, 2003, and October 21, 2004. (four kiosks hosted at N = 40) [ | 2006 USA, (O) | |
| Outpatient clinic California (one kiosk, small patient numbers). [ | 2006, USA, (R) | Small scale patient education kiosk for management of uncomplicated urinary tract infections. When published162 women have accessed computer directed therapy. |
| Primary care waiting room USA. Tailored info. for parents (mean age 26). (N = 1) [ | 2005, USA, (R) | Household safety. Information tailored to child and parent. |
| Health centres and libraries in deprived areas of Leicester, Sheffield, Nottingham (England) (N = 3) [ | 2005 England, (O) | Written and spoken information on 10 topics in Chinese, Bengali, Gujarati, Urdu, and Mirpuri Punjabi. 2,456 users of 3 kiosks over 10 months. |
| Outpatient waiting areas. (N = 2) [ | 2005 UK, (R/O) | Patient feedback in outpatient setting (diabetes and orthopaedics clinics) in Edinburgh |
| Five diabetes clinics in Chicago | 2005 USA, (R) | Aimed at low health literacy patients. Relatively less use of the computer among these participants |
| Emergency departments in USA (N = 1) [ | 2004–6 USA, (R) | Used to collect medication information about asthma and make recommendations. Could be used sitting or standing. |
| Hospital paediatric waiting room in New Mexico USA for Navajo parents (N = 1).[ | 2005 USA, (R) | Aim to improve knowledge of fever management, dental care, sleep position, nutrition, and car seat use |
| Patient waiting area of multi-specialty clinics, USA (N = 2) [ | 2004–6 USA, (O) | Information about eye disease in Spanish and English. Two kiosks for 2.5 years, 1 for 1.5 years. 38,868 user sessions. |
| (1) kiosk in shopping centre; (2) kiosks in 18 community settings in New South Wales, Australia [ | 2004 Australia, (O) | (1)Three-quarters noticed kiosk and 21% used it.
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| Primary care waiting room near Edinburgh [ | 2004 Scotland (O) | Studied characteristics of users Vs non users in a postal survey of just under 200 patients |
| 20 In Touch with Health kiosks sited in UK primary care [ | 2003 UK, (O) | Studied 20 kiosks over three years and half years. Novelty value for 4–5 months followed by decline |
| Kiosks sited in churches, senior centres, schools, shopping malls, grocery stores, hospitals (N = 100) [ | 2003 USA, (O) | Addition of Alzheimer ‘channel’ for Michigan Kiosk project. 100 kiosks sited in seniors centres, shopping malls etc. |
| In Touch and NHS kiosk compared with Surgery Door web site. England [ | 2003 UK, (O) | Comparison of log files (time spent etc) between web information and kiosk information |
| Nutrition education in food assistance programs among Hispanics in USA [ | 2002 USA, (R) | Bilingual Spanish-English. Comparative cost-effectiveness study Vs peer educators |
| Outpatient waiting room, diabetes eye examinations. [ | 2002, USA, (R) | Aimed at underserved populations |
| NHS Direct kiosks England [ | 2002 UK, (O) | Comparison of one month’s log data between 120 kiosks |
| Patient interviewing for anxiety and depression. [ | 2002 USA, (R) | Validation study of computerised HADS versus paper HADS (N = 1,304) |
Key to type of use: R = referred or invited; O = Opportunistic
Figure 3.Healthpoint in (from left) Maryhill Shopping Centre Glasgow 1991, 1994, and in a Surrey Hospital 1996.
Figure 4.Infosalud in (from left) Segovia General Hospital and on Segovia TV, 1999.
Figure 5.NHS Kiosk, 2001.
Figure 6.Touchscreen kiosk used for consumer feedback (from http://www.crtsolutions.co.uk/index.php?pageid=15).
Bigger installations of health kiosks.
| Country | Kiosk name | Max number approx | Dates | Sources |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UK | Healthpoint | 60 | 1989–1998 | [ |
| UK | NHS Kiosk | 136 | Sep 2000-c.2005 | [ |
| UK | In Touch with Health | 200 | Approx 1997-Continuing | [ |
| USA | Michigan | 100 | 1998–2004 | [ |
| Aust | Health CHIPS | 20 | Main tranch of kiosks no longer supported, used in certain niche ‘markets’ | [ |
| UK | Wellpoint | 268 | 2003-Continuing | Emails and phone calls Chris Dawson (Wellpoint) |
| UK | StartHere
| 130
| 2004–2007
| Emails from Mark Worger, Business Development Officer StartHere |
| UK | Elephant kiosks | 164 | Current installations in Staffordshire and Suffolk Primary Care and, Cambridgeshire Hospital | Email Mark Worger on behalf of Annette Walker (Elephant Kiosks) |
Figure 7.Booth in Whiteinch public library Glasgow (1998) with multimedia touch screen system for cognitive behavioural therapy for stress.
Figure 8.Wellpoint kiosk.
Figure 10.E-reception at Sherwood Forest Hospitals [109].