Literature DB >> 32316876

Perceived Need and Potential Applications of a Telehospitalist Service in Rural Areas.

Jane Moeckli1,2, Jeydith Gutierrez1,2,3, Peter J Kaboli1,2,3.   

Abstract

Background: Rural hospitals struggle to staff inpatient services and may not have the clinical expertise to achieve optimal outcomes. Telehospitalist services could address these problems by bringing hospital medicine expertise to rural communities. Introduction: Veterans Health Administration (VHA) rural hospitals need staffing alternatives to address gaps in inpatient coverage. This needs assessment identified perceived need for telehospitalist services as well as potential applications, benefits, and barriers from an administration perspective. Materials and
Methods: We used a rapid qualitative assessment approach based on semistructured interviews with 15 physician administrators at 12 rural and low-complexity hospitals in VHA in 2018.
Results: We identified a range of needs that could be addressed by telehospitalist services, including direct care delivery, support for local providers, and on-demand coverage to fill staffing gaps. Potential benefits included cost reductions, improved care quality, education, and addressing feelings of insular practice. Potential barriers included provider buy-in, cost, and technological limitations. Discussion: Our findings suggest that telehospitalist services could address inpatient coverage gaps, but with a range of views on how the service could be deployed. Telehospitalist services providing intermittent coverage could meet unmet clinical needs at appropriate economies of scale. Administrators were enthusiastic about applying innovative inpatient telemedicine initiatives, but perceived staff reluctance. The dynamic and multidisciplinary nature of inpatient care requires program acceptance at multiple levels, which may account for why it traditionally lags behind outpatient telemedicine. Conclusions: Rural hospital physician administrators perceived telehospitalist models as a viable option to address staffing needs and improve quality of care.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Veterans; hospitalist; rural health; telehospitalist; telemedicine

Year:  2020        PMID: 32316876     DOI: 10.1089/tmj.2020.0018

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Telemed J E Health        ISSN: 1530-5627            Impact factor:   3.536


  4 in total

1.  Nursing Workflow Change in a COVID-19 Inpatient Unit Following the Deployment of Inpatient Telehealth: Observational Study Using a Real-Time Locating System.

Authors:  Stacie Vilendrer; Mary E Lough; Donn W Garvert; Monique H Lambert; Jonathan Hsijing Lu; Birju Patel; Nigam H Shah; Michelle Y Williams; Samantha M R Kling
Journal:  J Med Internet Res       Date:  2022-06-17       Impact factor: 7.076

2.  Inpatient Telemedicine Implementation as an Infection Control Response to COVID-19: Qualitative Process Evaluation Study.

Authors:  Nadia Safaeinili; Stacie Vilendrer; Emma Williamson; Zicheng Zhao; Cati Brown-Johnson; Steven M Asch; Lisa Shieh
Journal:  JMIR Form Res       Date:  2021-06-16

Review 3.  The Recent Progress and Applications of Digital Technologies in Healthcare: A Review.

Authors:  Maksut Senbekov; Timur Saliev; Zhanar Bukeyeva; Aigul Almabayeva; Marina Zhanaliyeva; Nazym Aitenova; Yerzhan Toishibekov; Ildar Fakhradiyev
Journal:  Int J Telemed Appl       Date:  2020-12-03

4.  Patient Perspectives of Inpatient Telemedicine During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Qualitative Assessment.

Authors:  Stacie Vilendrer; Sarah Sackeyfio; Eliel Akinbami; Roy Ghosh; Jacklyn Ha Luu; Divya Pathak; Masahiro Shimada; Emmanuelle Elise Williamson; Lisa Shieh
Journal:  JMIR Form Res       Date:  2022-03-30
  4 in total

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