| Literature DB >> 32229474 |
Mohamad Alameddine1, Hani Tamim2, Dima Hadid3, Mohamad-Ali Cheaito3, Maha Makki2, Hadi Maatouk3, Eveline Hitti3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Health care provider usage of mobile devices is increasing globally; however, there is little understanding of patient perceptions on this behavior in a health care setting.Entities:
Keywords: attention; attitudes; code of conduct; digital professionalism; distraction; emergency department; empathy; patients; professionalism; smart devices
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32229474 PMCID: PMC7157496 DOI: 10.2196/16917
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.773
Demographic characteristics, self-reported usage of a mobile device, and their association with main outcome.
| Characteristic | Health care providers should not use a mobile device in the emergency department, n (%) | ||||||
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| All (N=338) | Disagree (n=206) | Agree (n=132) | ||
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| .02 | ||
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| Male | 158 (46.7) | 107 (51.9) | 51 (38.6) |
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| Female | 180 (53.3) | 99 (48.1) | 81 (61.4) |
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| .53 | ||
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| <25 | 81 (24.0) | 48 (23.3) | 33 (25.0) |
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| 25-35 | 93 (27.5) | 57 (27.7) | 36 (27.3) |
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| 36-50 | 73 (21.6) | 45 (21.8) | 28 (21.2) |
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| 51-65 | 52 (15.4) | 28 (13.6) | 24 (18.2) |
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| 66+ | 39 (11.5) | 28 (13.6) | 11 (8.3) |
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| .78 | ||
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| Less than high school | 32 (9.6) | 20 (10.0) | 12 (9.2) |
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| High school graduate | 47 (14.2) | 26 (12.9) | 21 (16.0) |
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| University graduate | 194 (58.4) | 121 (60.2) | 73 (55.7) |
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| Postgraduate | 59 (17.8) | 34 (16.9) | 25 (19.1) |
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| Employed | 221 (65.4) | 133 (64.9) | 88 (66.7) | .74 | ||
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| .40 | |||
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| <1000 | 42 (19.9) | 30 (22.7) | 12 (15.2) |
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| 1000-2000 | 55 (26.1) | 34 (25.8) | 21 (26.6) |
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| 2000+ | 114 (54.0) | 68 (51.5) | 46 (58.2) |
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| Own a mobile device | 327 (96.7) | 200 (97.1) | 127 (96.2) | .76 | ||
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| Smartphone | 319 (97.6) | 195 (97.5) | 124 (97.6) | >.99 | |
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| Tablet | 109 (33.3) | 70 (35.0) | 39 (30.7) | .42 | ||
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| Smartwatch/band | 27 (8.3) | 21 (10.5) | 6 (4.7) | .06 | ||
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| Regular phone | 1 (0.3) | 1 (0.5) | 0 (0.0) | >.99 | ||
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| Other | 95 (29.1) | 57 (28.5) | 38 (29.9) | .81 | ||
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| Phone calls | 284 (86.9) | 176 (88.0) | 108 (85.0) | .30 | |
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| Messaging apps | 284 (86.9) | 175 (87.5) | 109 (85.8) | .66 | ||
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| Social media | 205 (62.7) | 124 (62.0) | 81 (63.8) | .75 | ||
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| Games | 112 (34.3) | 76 (38.0) | 36 (28.3) | .07 | ||
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| Browsing the internet | 202 (61.8) | 120 (60.0) | 82 (64.6) | .41 | ||
Descriptive analysis of patients’ attitudes toward the usage of a mobile device by health care professionals and association with main outcome.
| Attitude |
| Health care providers should not use mobile devices in the emergency department, n (%) | ||||||||
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| All (N=338) | Disagree (n=206) | Agree (n=132) | |||||
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| Agree that mobile devices play a role in patient care | 279 (85.3) | 176 (88.0) | 103 (81.1) | .09 | |||||
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| Access medical information (general) | 249 (76.1) | 155 (77.5) | 94 (74.0) | .47 | ||||
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| Send/receive medical documents/images | 245 (74.9) | 155 (77.5) | 90 (70.9) | .18 | ||||
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| Look up patient information | 213 (65.1) | 131 (65.5) | 82 (64.6) | .86 | ||||
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| Personal calls | 150 (45.9) | 95 (47.5) | 55 (43.3) | .46 | ||||
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| Messaging apps | 153 (46.8) | 94 (47.0) | 59 (46.5) | .92 | ||||
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| Facebook or other social media | 105 (32.1) | 58 (29.0) | 47 (36.2) | .13 | ||||
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| Mobile devices play a role in improving health care delivery | 313 (92.6) | 196 (95.1) | 117 (88.6) | .03 | |||||
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| Mobile devices should only be used for medical care | 296 (87.8) | 183 (89.3) | 113 (85.6) | .32 | |||||
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| Mobile devices are a distraction to health care providers | 240 (71.0) | 126 (61.2) | 114 (86.4) | <.001 | |||||
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| Health care providers spend more time on their mobile devices than with me | 13 (3.8) | 6 (2.9) | 7 (5.3) | .27 | |||||
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| Mobile device usage by health care providers leads to poor patient-provider communication | 170 (50.3) | 81 (39.3) | 89 (67.4) | <.001 | |||||
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| Health care providers’ mobile devices usage impacts their ability to relate to me | 151 (44.8) | 61 (29.6) | 90 (68.7) | <.001 | |||||
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| I don’t like health care providers using their mobile devices when treating me | 205 (60.7) | 93 (45.1) | 112 (84.8) | <.001 | |||||
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| Mobile device usage demonstrates a lack of professionalism | 109 (32.3) | 39 (18.9) | 70 (53.4) | <.001 | |||||
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| Mobile device usage causes a breach of confidential information | 138 (40.9) | 68 (33.0) | 70 (53.4) | <.001 | |||||
Multivariate regression analysis for predictors of the main outcomea.
| Predictor variable | Health care providers should not use mobile devices in the emergency department | ||
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| Odds ratio ( 95% CI ) |
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| Gender | 1.67 (1.00-2.78) | .05 |
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| Distraction to health care provider | 2.54 (1.36-4.76) | .03 |
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| Demonstrates lack of professionalism | 2.77 (1.59-4.82) | <.001 |
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| Impacts health care provider’s ability to relate to me | 2.93 (1.72-4.99) | <.001 |
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aThe following variables were included in the full model: gender (reference: male); age (reference: <25 years); education (reference: