| Literature DB >> 35094713 |
Anna V Silven1,2, Petra G van Peet1,2, Sarah N Boers3, Monique Tabak4,5, Aviva de Groot6, Djoke Hendriks7, Hendrikus J A van Os1,2, Tobias N Bonten1,2, Douwe E Atsma2,8, Tycho J de Graaf9, Mirjam P Sombroek10, Niels H Chavannes1,2, María Villalobos-Quesada11,12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Implementation of digital health (eHealth) generally involves adapting pre-established and carefully considered processes or routines, and still raises multiple ethical and legal dilemmas. This study aimed to identify challenges regarding responsibility and liability when prescribing digital health in clinical practice. This was part of an overarching project aiming to explore the most pressing ethical and legal obstacles regarding the implementation and adoption of digital health in the Netherlands, and to propose actionable solutions.Entities:
Keywords: Digital health; Health policy; Liability; Professional digital health; Responsibility; eHealth
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35094713 PMCID: PMC8801038 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-021-07316-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Interacting stakeholders within ‘professional digital health’. Here the roles of patient, physician, the healthcare institution and the manufacturer (including those hosting and processing data) converge. The doctor-patient interaction is key because the decision-making process regarding the adoption of digital health generally occurs in this context. Professional digital health is influenced by the roles of the health institution and the manufacturer, which serve to ensure the quality of the digital health technology and offer technical and organisational support for its application when necessary. In the background, external factors outside of the physician’s control may influence the performance of a digital health technology, such as the quality of the internet connection.
Summary of recommendations aimed at clarifying physicians’ responsibilities within the scenario of professional digital health
| a. Professional/medical associations should play an active role in supporting physicians in the adoption of digital health. | |
| b. When possible, act and prescribe based on the organisational endorsement of evidence-based digital health. | |
| c. Actively contribute to the establishment of evidence-based digital health. | |
| d. Carry out a holistic evaluation of the patient, including (digital) health literacy. | |
| e. Communicate about the intended use. | |
| f. Communicate about patients’ responsibilities and explain the risks of adopting digital health. | |
| g. Communicate about the adequate response to unexpected situations. | |
| h. Communicate the conditions to access the device/app and give security advice. | |
| i. Communicate the steps to discontinue the use of digital health and offer alternative treatment options. |
Types of digital health technologies, according to general goal and the system’s autonomy level
| General goal | Description | System’s autonomy level |
|---|---|---|
| Digital health works as an automatic acute responder to the worsening of symptoms or emergency situations that tracks patients 24/7 (e.g. an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD), which automatically acts upon arrhythmias and additionally transfers real-time data to the healthcare professional). | Very high | |
| The digital health technology acquires data in a scheduled manner and issues automatic warnings for the patient and/or health professional when necessary (e.g. a smart medicine box that indicates when to take the medication and alerts patient and/or physician when medication is not taken). | High | |
| Digital health guides patients to take action independently, while the physician controls patients’ health through scheduled appointments (e.g. an insulin pump that is fully controlled by the patient, while the physician follows up the patient’s health through planned appointments). | Medium | |
| Digital health works as a digital registry that is regularly evaluated by the physician in a scheduled manner (e.g. patients with cardiovascular diseases monitor their physiological parameters from home with a device coupled to their electronic medical records; while their health is reviewed together with their physicians, during scheduled medical appointments). | Medium | |
| Digital health encourages patients to change behaviour patterns to live healthier, or to prevent or improve a condition (e.g. coaching apps that help with diet, sport, human contact, etc.). | Medium - Low | |
| Digital health is used as a communication support tool, in addition to the traditional ways to access medical care (e.g. primary care eConsults). | Low |