| Literature DB >> 25506616 |
Anne Marie Lunde Husebø1, Marianne Storm1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This review identifies the content of virtual visits in community nursing services to older adults and explores the manner in which service users and the nurses use virtual visits.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25506616 PMCID: PMC4258330 DOI: 10.1155/2014/689873
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ScientificWorldJournal ISSN: 1537-744X
Figure 1Flow diagram of study selection process.
Data abstraction and analysis*.
| Step 1: data reduction* | Step 2: data comparison* (a sample) |
|---|---|
| Study characteristics | Research design |
| Health care setting | |
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| Service content and utilization | To reduce loneliness |
| To enhance medication compliance | |
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| Patient experience | Decreased loneliness and enhanced psychosocial contact |
| Satisfaction with the access and flexibility of the service | |
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| Experience of home health care nurses | Simplified teaching and informing the patient |
| Concerns for patient privacy | |
*Adopted from Whittemore and Knafl (2005) [16].
Overview of included studies (N = 12).
| Authors (year) | Aim | Design | Participants | Virtual visits program | Outcome measures | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arnaert and Delesie (2007) [ | To develop measures of change in homebound elderly peoples' functioning and identify characteristics of individuals whose functioning improves with videophone (VP) nursing care | Evaluation of a home telehealth program using eight different assessment scales | 71 elderly with mean age of 72, 70% living alone and 76% receiving formal care | Psychosocial support and educational interventions | Loneliness Scale | The VP nursing care reduced social loneliness and melancholia and improved social activity and memory. No improvement in ADL was reported. Frequency of VT calls showed a significant and positive association with change in general health functioning in individuals with small social networks and reduced family support. Time watching television, poor social network, and age >75 years were significantly associated with improved self-perception |
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Arnaert and Wainrigth (2008) [ | To uncover challenges involved in implementing remote monitoring and interactive video technology for elderly patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) | Feasibility study applying a descriptive and evaluative design | Three nurses 34–58 years of age. Three patients 56–83 years of age with COPD as their primary diagnosis | Daily virtual visits from a telehealth nurse to explore patients' need of nursing interventions following hospital discharge | n.a.* | Reported challenges in running the home telehealth (HTH) were related to team performance, nurse training, patient recruitment, and technical issues with installation and use of HTH. The nurses received an average of 11.5 hours of HTH training prior to the implementation of HTH. The patients experienced difficulties in troubleshooting technological issues and handling medical devices |
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| Bowles et al. (2011) [ | To compare a home telehealth (HTH) intervention for elderly patients following hospital discharge for heart failure to usual skilled home care | Randomized controlled trial | Two hundred and eighteen heart failure patients: 102 in intervention group and 116 in control group. | The intervention group received a combination of in-person and HTH daily monitoring and intermitted video visits. | Patient satisfaction (questionnairea) | Of the 101 patients in the HTH intervention, 36 did not receive or wanted to receive any HTH. Younger patients were more likely to accept the technology. Access to care, more in-person contact, and satisfaction were significantly higher for HTH patients. No significant differences between intervention and control group in time to readmissions or death nor in emergency visits were found |
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| Demiris et al. (2003) [ | To examine technical problems that affect the interaction between nurse and patient during virtual visits (VV) and to assess the verbal interaction | Randomized controlled trial | Ten patients with mean age of 78; six patients had congestive heart failure, three had COPD, and one had diabetes-related wounds. | VV were used for assessing the patient's clinical status, promoting medication and treatment compliance, psychosocial issues, and patient information and education | Technical quality (10-item questionnairea) | One hundred and twenty-two VV were reviewed. Mean duration 21 min. Patients received on average two sessions with 30-minute training. No technical problem in 78 visits. Besides technical issues the VV comprised the following themes: general information, clinical status, psychosocial issues, education, promoting compliance, patient satisfaction, administrative issues, and accessibility. The nurses reported the VV as very useful or useful for patient care and that the majority of the VV would not have been performed better in person |
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| Finkelstein et al. (2004) [ | To demonstrate quality, clinical usefulness, and patients' satisfaction with home telehealth (HTH) and virtual visits (VV) | Randomized controlled trial | Fifty-three patients with heart failure, COPD, and chronic wounds, mean age 74 and randomized to three groups: (1) standard care + videoconference, (2) standard care, videoconference, and monitoring, or (3) control group receiving standard home care only | VV consisted of two-way audio and video interaction between nurses and patients at home, a web-messaging system, and physiological monitoring system | Telemedicine Perception Questionnaire | A total of 567 VV were conducted, with 276 by video. Nurses report few technical problems and reported VV useful and time saving for the nurses, but not for the patients. The video/monitoring-group was significantly more positive to HTH after testing for several weeks. Satisfaction with homecare increased for virtual visit subjects. These patients felt safe and that the nurses paid attention to their concerns and met their needs. The VV were found to be time flexible and easy to schedule |
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| Jönsson and Willman (2008) [ | To compare conventional methods on wound home care with a virtual concept for patients with leg wounds | Quasi-experimental study with a test group and a comparison group. | Ten patients with wounds on lower leg/foot and their responsible nurse. Eight patients and nurses in the control group. | The virtual information and consulting concept, | Interaction between patient and nurse (22- item questionnairea) | Patients in both groups reported seeing staff caring for them and receiving information and a rapid reply as beneficial. Patients in the test group reported a need of more time to familiarize themselves with the technology. Nurses in the test group found the technology useful for them more than for the patients; it was humane and economical, with the web material as an educational resource. The nurses in the test group had more frequent and longer travel times due to the patients' being in poorer condition than patients in the control group |
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Van Der Heide et al. (2012) [ | To establish the effects of a video communication system (CareTV) on loneliness and safety in elderly patients. | Longitudinal study with baseline data collection at moment of inclusion, and a follow-up measurement 1 year after inclusion | One hundred and thirty frail elderly clients of home care organizations, mean age of 73 years | The videophone (VP) service of the CareTV was called “Good morning, Good Evening” and included medication service used on a daily basis and an alarm function used less than once per month | The Loneliness Questionnaire | Eighty-eight percent of the clients were satisfied with the use of the VP. Technical problems were reported by 12% of the participants. For 63% of the participants, feelings of loneliness decreased significantly ( |
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| Mair et al. (2005) [ | To compare the perspectives of patients and providers on telecare encounters via virtual visits used to reduce hospital readmission | Descriptive, evaluation study by the use of log reports and a questionnaire | Twenty-two nurses and 22 patients with COPD. Mean age of 71 years | Videophone intervention to support management of acute exacerbations in COPD patients living at home | Patient and provider perspectives on home telecare (10-item questionnairea) | Nurses completed 150 logs, and patients 145 logs. The patients consistently reported significantly more positive views of the telehealth encounters than their health care providers. Care providers were concerned about the negative effects of telehealth on communication and their ability to assess the patient's medical problems accurately, and they were less comfortable when using the telehealth system |
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| Savolainen et al. (2008) [ | To evaluate the “Assisting Carers using Telematic Interventions to meet Older peoples' Needs” (ACTION) system | Semistructured interviews and data logging | Eight family users (caregivers and elderly persons), with mean age 73 years. | The ACTION-project using information and communication technology to enhance quality of life and independence and reduce social isolation in frail elderly and family at home | n.a. | Average call time was 40 min/month/user; average initiated calls were six per user. Patients reported videophone (VP) reduced loneliness and isolation, assisted with making new social contacts, and increased social activities and safety. Barriers were having enough people to call and technical start-up problems. Caregivers reported the VP created trustful communication; the camera was useful in demonstrating procedures and making assessments. Privacy issues, technical problems, and need for a learning period for the family were a concern |
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| Smith et al. (2007) [ | To assess technical success, medication self- administration, neuropsychiatric symptoms, and mood burden following use of interactive video technology to monitor medication compliance in persons with mild dementia | Quasi-experimental study with quantitative outcome data from patients. | Fourteen elderly (aged 80–85) with mild dementia living alone. Eight persons received a video monitoring or a telephone service. Six persons received telephone service or standard unmonitored medication compliance service and acted as control group | Televideo technology to monitor medication compliance | Geriatric Depression Scale | Participants with video and phone monitoring were contacted 4,000 times by nursing assistance services according to their medication schedule. End medication compliance was 81% in the video-monitored group compared to 80% in the phone-group, and 66% in the control. Comparison of compliance from initial to end ratings shows stable compliance in monitored participants, were reduced in unmonitored participants. Rate of change between video and no-monitoring was significantly different ( |
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| Wade et al. (2009) [ | To assess the practicality, suitability, safety, and costs of delivering daily home medication management by virtual visits (VV) | Pilot study | Nine clients (aged 61–85 years), six of them with dementia and one with memory loss. Four call center nurses | Two participants received Directly Observed Therapy for tuberculosis, 7 receiving general medication management | n.a. | Average length of the VV was nine minutes compared to 19 minutes for an equivalent field visit. One virtual visit was 60% of the cost of a field visit. All clients reported the VV easy to use, and six would continue use. One mentioned flexibility of service as a positive. Nurses reported personal contact, continuity of care, flexibility, and early intervention as advantages |
*n.a.: not applicable, ascale developed for application in the particular study.