| Literature DB >> 29713341 |
Todd Molfenter1, Roger Brown2, Andrew O'Neill1, Ed Kopetsky3, Alexander Toy1.
Abstract
Telemedicine applications offer innovative approaches for treating and reducing the effects of substance use disorders (SUDs). This analysis assessed the interest in and use of 11 telemedicine applications in a sample of 363 SUD organizations in the United States of America. Fifty percent of the organizations expressed high rates of interest in seven of the telemedicine applications, demonstrating the appeal of telemedicine within this field. The top three self-reported telemedicine applications being used were (1) computerized screening/assessments (44.6%), (2) telephone-based recovery supports (29.5%), and (3) telephone-based therapy (28.37%). The greatest gaps between interest and use were for (1) texting appointment reminders (55.2% differential), (2) mobile apps for posttreatment recovery (46.6% differential), and (3) recovery support chats (46.6% differential). A Latent Class Analysis (LCA) of the organizations' telemedicine use behavior identified three groupings: "Innovators" that were using a range of technologies (n = 27, 7.4%); "Technology Traditionalists" that limited their use to telephone, video, and web portal technologies (n = 101, 27.8%); and "Low Tech" that had low overall technology use (n = 235, 64.7%). Future studies should build on how telemedicine could be applied in SUD settings, organizational behaviors towards its adoption, and telemedicine's effect on treatment adherence and clinical outcomes.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29713341 PMCID: PMC5866865 DOI: 10.1155/2018/3932643
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Telemed Appl ISSN: 1687-6415
Survey participation rates.
| State | Surveys completed | Surveys distributed | Return rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Illinois | 73 | 132 | 55.3% |
| Iowa | 24 | 24 | 100% |
| Kentucky | 10 | 10 | 100% |
| Massachusetts | 73 | 130 | 56.2% |
| Ohio | 58 | 65 | 89.2% |
| Oklahoma | 71 | 74 | 95.9% |
| Oregon | 25 | 59 | 42.4% |
| South Carolina | 29 | 29 | 100% |
|
| |||
| Total | 363 | 552 | 65.7% |
Technology interest and use.
| Technology | % High interest | Relative rank | % Currently using | Relative rank | % Difference | Relative rank |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Computerized screening/assessments | 69.97% | 1 | 44.63% | 1 | 25.34% | 9 |
| Texting appt. reminders | 68.40% | 2 | 13.22% | 6 | 55.18% | 1 |
| Web portal for patients | 58.40% | 3 | 14.60% | 5 | 43.80% | 4 |
| Mobile apps for posttreatment recovery | 55.65% | 4 | 9.09% | 7 | 46.56% | 2 |
| Video-based therapy | 54.82% | 5 | 20.39% | 4 | 34.43% | 8 |
| Telephone-based recovery support | 53.99% | 6 | 29.48% | 2 | 24.51% | 10 |
| Recovery support chats | 53.44% | 7 | 6.89% | 8 | 46.55% | 3 |
| Telephone-based therapy | 49.04% | 8 | 28.37% | 3 | 20.67% | 11 |
| Texting motivational messages | 45.18% | 9 | 2.48% | 10 | 42.70% | 5 |
| Mobile apps for treatment | 40.77% | 10 | 4.96% | 9 | 35.81% | 6 |
| Virtual worlds | 35.54% | 11 | 0.55% | 11 | 34.99% | 7 |
Technology implementation concerns inventory results.
| Item | Average | Organizational concern |
|---|---|---|
| Informational security | 3.90 | Very High |
| Reimbursement policy towards the technology | 3.78 | Very High |
| Regulation barriers | 3.53 | Very High |
| The technology's impact on workflow | 3.25 | High |
| Counselor attitudes toward the technology | 2.71 | High |
| Patient attitudes toward the technology | 2.62 | High |
Latent class analysis of technology use: goodness-of-fit statistics and likelihood ratio tests.
| Class | Entropy | BIC | AIC | Adj AIC | CAIC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | - | 3038.434 | 2995.596 | 3003.536 | 3049.434 |
| 2 | 0.693 | 2928.513 | 2838.942 | 2855.544 | 2951.513 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 4 | 0.721 | 2952.646 | 2769.61 | 2803.536 | 2999.646 |
Class 1 N = 27 (7.4%), Class 2 N = 101 (27.8%), and Class 3 N = 235 (64.7%).
Figure 1Latent Class Analysis (LCA) Estimated Probabilities. 1: computerized screening/assessments; 2: texting appointment reminders; 3: texting motivation messages; 4: organizational web portal; 5: video-based therapy; 6: mobile apps for use during treatment; 7: mobile apps for use after treatment; 8: secure chats for recovery supports; 9: telephone-based therapy; 10: telephone-based posttreatment recovery; 11: virtual worlds for treatment.