| Literature DB >> 32784175 |
Sari Kujala1, Elske Ammenwerth2, Heta Kolanen3, Minna Ervast4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The number of public eHealth services that support patient self-management is rapidly increasing. However, the implementation of these eHealth services for self-management has encountered challenges.Entities:
Keywords: adoption; implementation; interview; organization; patient self-management
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32784175 PMCID: PMC7450365 DOI: 10.2196/17696
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Description of digital care paths.
| Digital care path | Functions | Starting date (first patient entered) | Estimated potential number of patients | Real number of patients between the starting date and 11/3/2019 (path ended or still ongoing) |
| Mitral valve surgery | Information | 4/2018 | 150 per year | 177 |
| Cervical spine surgery | Messaging | 10/2018 piloting | 500 per year | 244 |
| Pacemaker surgery | Information before pacemaker implantation and answers to the most frequently asked questions | 12/2018 | 300 per year | 214 |
| In vitro fertilization | Appointments and questionnaires | 11/2017 | 400 per year | 597 |
| Pregnancy | Appointments | 11/2017 | 10,000 per year | 17,229 |
| Gestational diabetes | Messaging, self-management information, diary, tasks, and tests | 1/2019 | 200 per year | 239 |
| Spinal cord disability | Messaging and sending pictures | 10/2018 piloting | 200 per year | 200 |
| Rheumatology | Information about the clinic and care and answers to the most frequently asked questions | 1/2019 | Thousands per year | 1951 |
Details about the study participants.
| No. | Role | Expertise | Responsibility | Hospital ID |
| 1 | Development manager | Economics, change management, and implementation | Managing digitalization of health services | 1 |
| 2 | Technical product owner and project coordinator | Software engineering | Project manager of digital care paths | 1 |
| 3 | Physician project manager | Medicine | Planning and implementing a digital care path | 2 |
| 4 | Nurse project coordinator | Nursing | Planning and implementing a digital care path | 2 |
| 5 | Nurse project coordinator | Nursing | Planning and implementing a digital care path | 2 |
| 6 | Nurse project coordinator | Nursing | Planning and implementing a digital care path | 2 |
| 7 | Nurse project coordinator | Nursing | Planning and implementing a digital care path | 2 |
| 8 | Nurse project coordinator | Nursing | Planning and implementing a digital care path | 3 |
| 9 | Nurse project coordinator | Nursing | Planning and implementing a digital care path | 4 |
| 10 | Nurse project coordinator | Nursing | Planning and implementing a digital care path | 5 |
Challenges of implementing eHealth services for self-management.
| Dimension and themes | Mentions (n=9), n (%) | |
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| Problems with usability, technical problems, and missing functionalities | 8 (89) |
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| Resistance, lack of use, and difficulty changing professionals’ work processes | 7 (78) |
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| Professionals not informing patients about the eHealth services | 3 (33) |
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| Negative previous experiences with information systems | 1 (11) |
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| Lack of training | 1 (11) |
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| Lack of technical support | 1 (11) |
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| Problems with usability and missing functionalities | 7 (78) |
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| Lack of use | 4 (44) |
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| Lack of active patient participation in planning | 1 (11) |
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| Extra work caused by insufficient interoperability | 3 (33) |
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| Bad fit with the work processes | 2 (22) |
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| Lack of knowledge about the possible technical functionalities | 3 (33) |
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| Lack of resources | 3 (33) |
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| Lack of management support | 2 (22) |
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| Unclear roles during implementation | 1 (11) |
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| Failure of the initial technical platform to fit the organization’s goals and processes | 1 (11) |
Practices for managing the challenges of implementation.
| Dimension and practices | Mentions (n=9), n (%) | |
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| Involving all the stakeholders, professional groups, and a technical expert in planning the service | 2 (22) |
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| Testing and piloting the eHealth services before implementation | 4 (44) |
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| Repeatedly informing health professionals about the implementation, changes, and the influence of the new services to their work for an extended period via unit meetings, training, personal contacts, and laminated instructions | 4 (44) |
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| Proactively responding to health professionals’ concerns | 1 (11) |
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| Involving frontline leaders and health professionals in planning the services and implementation is needed to create buy-in | 3 (33) |
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| Providing adequate introductory knowledge, repeated training, and personal guidance as well as a test environment, which is required to train professionals | 4 (44) |
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| Training a superuser to encourage health professionals and support implementation | 1 (11) |
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| Proceeding slowly and gradually, so professionals have time to adjust to and practice using the new services | 2 (22) |
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| Reserving extra personnel resources and time for the changing tasks | 1 (11) |
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| Providing technical support with a responsible person when needed | 1 (11) |
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| Identifying a patient group that can benefit from an eHealth service and having a patient point of view | 2 (22) |
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| Involving patients early on and creating new methods needed to motivate patient participation | 2 (22) |
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| Informing patients in an interesting way and providing leaflets or other marketing materials | 2 (22) |
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| Collecting constant feedback from patients and improving the service through the use of questionnaires, contacting patients for further details to create a partnership, and request for feedback from patients that did not use the service | 3 (33) |
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| Encouraging health professionals to discuss the digital service when meeting a patient and to reserve digital appointments with the patient | 2 (22) |
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| Offering technical support during problems | 1 (11) |
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| Identifying the current work processes and needs | 1 (11) |
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| Fitting the eHealth service plans to current care processes to support and ease health professionals’ work, reduce the number of phone calls, increase remote work, and increase interoperability of the systems so that health professionals can view patient information from one system and do not need to record the same information twice | 5 (56) |
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| Ensuring the service is quick, easy, and effortless to request and use | 5 (56) |
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| Planning changes in the work processes well in advance and piloting the services to test the new processes and show the benefits of the service | 1 (11) |
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| Identifying the needs early | 1 (11) |
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| Fitting the eHealth service plans to the technical possibilities, including demonstrations and examples of existing services to help illustrate the possibilities | 2 (22) |
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| Evaluating the work cost of implementation, a responsible person, resources needed, and the potential benefits | 2 (22) |
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| Planning the implementation carefully in advance and defining the roles and responsibilities of the participants, changes, ways of relieving resistance, and solutions to problems | 5 (56) |
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| Involving an active multi-professional team | 1 (11) |
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| Indicating more than one person as a spokesperson to support the implementation, especially frontline leaders, who were considered important in influencing their subordinates’ commitment and providing resources for implementation | 2 (22) |
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| Involving and informing top management to provide support and resources and ensure the availability of spaces and devices | 2 (22) |
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| Identifying measures of impacts and making baseline measurements in the very beginning | 1 (11) |
Figure 1Extended FITT (Fit between Individuals, Task, and Technology) framework.