Literature DB >> 34184994

Clinician Perspectives on Telemedicine: Observational Cross-sectional Study.

Maria Alcocer Alkureishi1, Zi-Yi Choo2, Gena Lenti2, Jason Castaneda2, Mengqi Zhu3, Kenneth Nunes4, George Weyer3, Julie Oyler3, Sachin Shah3,5, Wei Wei Lee3.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Since the COVID-19 pandemic onset, telemedicine has increased exponentially across numerous outpatient departments and specialties. Qualitative studies examining clinician telemedicine perspectives during the pandemic identified challenges with physical examination, workflow concerns, burnout, and reduced personal connection with patients. However, these studies only included a relatively small number of physicians or were limited to a single specialty, and few assessed perspectives on integrating trainees into workflows, an important area to address to support the clinical learning environment. As telemedicine use continues, it is necessary to understand a range of clinician perspectives.
OBJECTIVE: This study aims to survey pediatric and adult medicine clinicians at the University of Chicago Medical Center to understand their telemedicine benefits and barriers, workflow impacts, and training and support needs.
METHODS: In July 2020, we conducted an observational cross-sectional study of University of Chicago Medical Center faculty and advanced practice providers in the Department of Medicine (DOM) and Department of Pediatrics (DOP).
RESULTS: The overall response rate was 39% (200/517; DOM: 135/325, 42%; DOP: 65/192, 34%); most respondents were physicians (DOM: 100/135, 74%; DOP: 51/65, 79%). One-third took longer to prepare for (65/200, 33%) and conduct (62/200, 32%) video visits compared to in-person visits. Male clinicians reported conducting a higher percentage of telemedicine visits by video than their female counterparts (P=.02), with no differences in the number of half-days per week providing direct outpatient care or supervising trainees. Further, clinicians who conducted a higher percentage of their telemedicine by video were less likely to feel overwhelmed (P=.02), with no difference in reported burnout. Female clinicians were "more overwhelmed" with video visits compared to males (41/130, 32% vs 12/64, 19%; P=.05). Clinicians 50 years or older were "less overwhelmed" than those younger than 50 years (30/85, 35% vs 23/113, 20%; P=.02). Those who received more video visit training modalities (eg, a document and webinar on technical issues) were less likely to feel overwhelmed by the conversion to video visits (P=.007) or burnt out (P=.009). In addition, those reporting a higher ability to technically navigate a video visit were also less likely to feel overwhelmed by video visits (P=.02) or burnt out (P=.001). The top telemedicine barriers were patient-related: lack of technology access, lack of skill, and reluctance. Training needs to be focused on integrating learners into workflows. Open-ended responses highlighted a need for increased support staff. Overall, more than half "enjoyed conducting video visits" (119/200, 60%) and wanted to continue using video visits in the future (150/200, 75%).
CONCLUSIONS: Despite positive telemedicine experiences, more support to facilitate video visits for patients and clinicians is needed. Further, clinicians need additional training on trainee education and integration into workflows. Further work is needed to better understand why gender and age differences exist. In conclusion, interventions to address clinician and patient barriers, and enhance clinician training are needed to support telemedicine's durability. ©Maria Alcocer Alkureishi, Zi-Yi Choo, Gena Lenti, Jason Castaneda, Mengqi Zhu, Kenneth Nunes, George Weyer, Julie Oyler, Sachin Shah, Wei Wei Lee. Originally published in JMIR Human Factors (https://humanfactors.jmir.org), 09.07.2021.

Entities:  

Keywords:  burnout; clinician perspective; human factors; outpatient; patient-centered care; telemedicine; trainee; training; virtual health; workflow

Year:  2021        PMID: 34184994     DOI: 10.2196/29690

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JMIR Hum Factors        ISSN: 2292-9495


  2 in total

1.  Provider Evaluation of a Novel Virtual Hybrid Hospital at Home Model.

Authors:  Michael J Maniaci; Karla Maita; Ricardo A Torres-Guzman; Francisco R Avila; John P Garcia; Abdullah Eldaly; Antonio J Forte; Gautam V Matcha; Ricardo J Pagan; Margaret R Paulson
Journal:  Int J Gen Med       Date:  2022-02-22

2.  Factors Influencing How Providers Assess the Appropriateness of Video Visits: Interview Study With Primary and Specialty Health Care Providers.

Authors:  Caroline Gray; Charlie Wray; Rebecca Tisdale; Camila Chaudary; Cindie Slightam; Donna Zulman
Journal:  J Med Internet Res       Date:  2022-08-24       Impact factor: 7.076

  2 in total

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