| Literature DB >> 32186521 |
Michael McGillion1,2, Carley Ouellette3, Amber Good2, Marissa Bird1, Shaunattonie Henry1, Wendy Clyne4, Andrew Turner5, Paul Ritvo6, Sarah Ritvo6, Nazari Dvirnik2,3, Andre Lamy2,7, Richard Whitlock2,7, Christopher Lawton8, Jake Walsh8, Ken Paterson8, Janine Duquette9, Karla Sanchez Medeiros2, Fadi Elias2,3, Ted Scott8, Joseph Mills10, Deborah Harrington10, Mark Field10, Prathiba Harsha3, Stephen Yang11, Elizabeth Peter12, Sanjeev Bhavnani13, P J Devereaux2,14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cardiac and major vascular surgeries are common surgical procedures associated with high rates of postsurgical complications and related hospital readmission. In-hospital remote automated monitoring (RAM) and virtual hospital-to-home patient care systems have major potential to improve patient outcomes following cardiac and major vascular surgery. However, the science of deploying and evaluating these systems is complex and subject to risk of implementation failure.Entities:
Keywords: monitoring, physiologic; postoperative care; user testing
Year: 2020 PMID: 32186521 PMCID: PMC7113803 DOI: 10.2196/15548
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1The Philips Guardian Solution. (A) MP5 spot-check monitor, (B) wireless blood pressure monitor, (C) wireless continuous pulse oximetry monitor, and (D) wireless respiratory sensor. Reproduced with permission from Philips Canada (Markham, ON) (reprinted with copyright permission from the publisher).
Figure 2The Philips electronic Transition to Ambulatory Care system, featuring tablet interface and Bluetooth-enabled vital signs monitors. Reproduced with permission from Philips (reprinted with copyright permission from the publisher).
Figure 3Nurse and patient user testing workflow diagram.
Nurse participant characteristics (n=26).
| Nurse characteristics | Values | |
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| Male | 4 (15) |
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| Female | 22 (85) |
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| White | 21 (81) |
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| African decent | 4 (15) |
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| Asian | 1 (4) |
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| Professional degree | 6 (23) |
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| Bachelor’s degree | 11 (42) |
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| Masters’ degree | 7 (27) |
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| Diploma | 2 (8) |
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| Full-time | 19 (73) |
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| Part-time | 7 (28) |
| Number of practicing years, mean (SD) | 16.5 (12) | |
Electronic Transition to Ambulatory Care patient participant characteristics (N=11).
| Characteristics | Values, n (%) | |
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| Male | 7 (64) |
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| Female | 4 (36) |
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| White | 11 (100) |
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| Married | 7 (64) |
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| Widowed | 3 (27) |
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| Divorced or separated | 1 (9) |
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| Some high school—no diploma | 5 (46) |
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| High school diploma | 3 (27) |
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| Trade, technical, vocational training | 1 (9) |
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| Professional degree | 2 (18) |
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| Full-time | 2 (18) |
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| Part-time | 3 (27) |
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| Retired | 6 (55) |
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| Coronary artery bypass graft | 6 (55) |
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| Abdominal aortic aneurysm repair | 1 (9) |
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| Heart valve replacement | 4 (36) |
User performance.
| User (N) and task | Completed, n (%) | Completed with difficulty or additional prompting, n (%) | Not completed, n (%) | Task completion time (mm:ss), median (IQR) | |
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| Nurse pairing the patient to the monitor | 11 (79) | 3 (21) | 0 (0) | 00:10 (00:05-00:11) |
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| Assign wireless devices to the patient | 9 (64) | 5 (36) | 0 (0) | 04:30 (03:10-06:16) |
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| Complete full set of vital signs | 14 (100) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 01:04 (00:40-01:47) |
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| Validate EWSc | 13 (93) | 0 (0) | 1 (7) | 00:03 (00:02-00:05) |
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| Review and manage the patient’s vital sign trends | 8 (58) | 6 (42) | 0 (0) | 00:26 (00:17-00:47) |
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| Wireless device management | 12 (87) | 2 (13) | 0 (0) | 02:08 (01:10-03:17) |
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| Infection control procedures | 14 (100) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 01:03 (00:30-01:50) |
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| Turn on device | 9 (82) | 1 (9) | 1 (9) | 00:08 (00:05-00:15) |
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| Take vital signs (BPe, SpO2f, weight, HRg, temperature) | 8 (73) | 3 (27) | 0 (0) | 01:01 (00:45-01:14) |
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| View scheduled appointment in the calendar | 11 (100) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 00:22 (00:18-00:43) |
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| Engage in follow-up surveys | 9 (82) | 2 (18) | 0 (0) | 00:16(00:12-00:20) |
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| Interface with nurse | 10 (91) | 1 (9) | 0 (0) | 00:16 (00:06-00:39) |
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| Log in and enroll new patient | 11 (92) | 1 (8) | 0 (0) | 00:41 (00:31-01:18) |
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| Assign H2Hh protocol | 6 (50) | 5 (42) | 1 (8) | 01:55 (01:14-02:21) |
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| Assign BTEi devices | 0 (0) | 11 (92) | 1 (8) | 03:35 (03:10-04:47) |
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| Review score and triage the patient | 5 (42) | 6 (50) | 1 (8) | 00:47 (00:28-01:07) |
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| Video call and patient wound photo | 12 (100) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 02:35 (01:57-03:49) |
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| Appropriate escalation of care | 12 (100) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | Verbal response (not timed) |
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| Add clinical notes | 12 (100) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 01:12 (00:46-01:34) |
aCAN: Canada.
bUK: United Kingdom.
cEWS: early warning score.
deTrAC: electronic transition to ambulatory care.
eBP: blood pressure.
fSpO2: blood oxygen saturation.
gHR: heart rate.
hH2H: hospital-to-home.
iBTE: Bluetooth-enabled.
User satisfaction—Net Promoter Scale score.
| User (N) and group | Raw scores (range 0-10) | Value, mean (SD) | NPSa score (% of promoter−% of detractors) | |
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| 8.8 (0.89)d | 64 | ||
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| Nurse 1 | 8 |
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| Nurse 2 | 8 |
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| Nurse 3 | 8 |
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| Nurse 4 | 8 |
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| Nurse 5 | 7 |
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| Nurse 6 | 9 |
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| Nurse 7 | 10 |
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| Nurse 8 | 10 |
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| Nurse 9 | 10 |
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| Nurse 10 | 9 |
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| Nurse 11 | 9 |
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| Nurse 12 | 9 |
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| Nurse 13 | 9 |
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| Nurse 14 | 9 |
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| 7.7 (1.4)d | 25 | ||
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| Nurse 1 | 4 |
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| Nurse 2 | 7 |
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| Nurse 3 | 8 |
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| Nurse 4 | 7 |
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| Nurse 5 | 8 |
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| Nurse 6 | 8 |
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| Nurse 7 | 8 |
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| Nurse 8 | 8 |
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| Nurse 9 | 9 |
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| Nurse 10 | 9 |
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| Nurse 11 | 9 |
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| Nurse 12 | 9 |
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| 9.2 (0.75) | 82 | ||
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| Patient 1 | 8 |
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| Patient 2 | 8 |
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| Patient 3 | 9 |
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| Patient 4 | 10 |
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| Patient 5 | 10 |
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| Patient 6 | 10 |
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| Patient 7 | 9 |
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| Patient 8 | 9 |
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| Patient 9 | 9 |
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| Patient 10 | 9 |
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| Patient 11 | 10 |
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aNPS: Net Promoter Scale.
bCAN: Canada.
cUK: United Kingdom.
dThis is the average score.
eeTrAC: electronic transition to ambulatory care.