| Literature DB >> 34104464 |
Flavio Tomasella1, Heather May Morgan2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Digital technologies are increasingly becoming an integral part of our daily routine and professional lives, and the healthcare field is no exception. Commercially available digital health technologies (DHTs - e.g. smartphones, smartwatches and apps) may hold significant potential in healthcare upon successful and constructive implementation. Literature on the topic is split between enthusiasm associated with potential benefits and concerns around privacy, reliability and overall effectiveness. However, little is known about what healthcare professionals (HCPs) have experienced so far with patients and what they perceive as the main advantages and disadvantages of adoption. This study therefore aims to investigate current perceptions of HCPs towards self-tracked health-related outputs from devices and apps available to the public.Entities:
Keywords: Digital health; health apps; healthcare professionals; mHealth; qualitative interviews; self-tracking; smartphones; smartwatches; wearables
Year: 2021 PMID: 34104464 PMCID: PMC8145583 DOI: 10.1177/20552076211018366
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Digit Health ISSN: 2055-2076
Figure 1.Recruitment advert.
Figure 2.Topic guide indicative content.
Participants details.
| Participant number | Role as HCP | Quotation labels | Nationality |
|---|---|---|---|
| 001 | Pharmacist | Pharmacist | UK |
| 002 | Medical student (4th year) | Med student | UK |
| 003 | GP | GP and academic researcher | UK |
| 004 | Medical student (junior doctor) | Med graduate | UK |
| 005 | GP | GP and academic lecturer | UK |
| 006 | Nurse | Nurse | Greece |
| 007 | GP and global health (GH) expert | GH expert | US |
| 008 | Auxiliary nurse and NHS digital employee | Aux nurse | UK |
| 009 | Nurse | Nurse and academic | UK |
Data analysis framework.
| Main theme | Code | Sub-code |
|---|---|---|
| Participant background(s) | Profession | CP |
| GP/medical | ||
| Nursing | ||
| Allied/other | ||
| Ethnicity | ||
| Experiences | ||
| DH tech mentions | Wearables | |
| Apps | ||
| Other | ||
| Experience with patients/clients | Yes | |
| Some | ||
| No | ||
| Attitudes towards DH tech & patients | Positive | |
| Negative | ||
| Digital Health self-tracking advantages | Time/resources | |
| Conversation | ||
| Patient autonomy | ||
| Behaviour change | ||
| Digital Health self-tracking disadvantages | Time/resources | |
| Conversation | ||
| Patient autonomy | Patient digital (il)literacy | |
| Data gaming | ||
| Data security | Business data VS NHS data ownership and usage | |
| Inequality concerns | ||
| Data obsession | ||
| Wearables and related outputs | Pros | |
| Cons | ||
| Reliability | Accuracy | |
| Precision | ||
| Error | ||
| Calibration | ||
| Heath in the digital/online environment | Trusted sources | NHS Apps Library (approved apps) |
| Social media | ||
| Other (e.g. blogs or specific websites) | ||
| Evidence-based information VS personal opinion | ||
| Barriers towards implementation | Patient digital literacy | Age-associated digital illiteracy (−ve attitude from potential users who could benefit the most) |
| Cost for patients (devices AND specific apps) | ||
| Cost for NHS | ||
| Software/hardware failure | ||
| Quick obsolescence of new tech | ||
| Patient compliance | ||
| Solutions for implementation of DH tech in healthcare | Interventions on equipment | |
| Interventions on HCPs | ||
| Interventions on patients | ||
| Other | ||
| Future | Overall technological advancements and its consequences | |
| Direction of future research | ||
| +ve aspects | ||
| −ve aspects | ||
| Deviant themes | Data-secure translation services to overcome language barriers in a multicultural society such as the Scottish one | Barrier or opportunity? (e.g. for a new market/research area) |