| Literature DB >> 35436869 |
James H Ford1, Sally A Jolles2, Dee Heller2, Madeline Langenstroer2, Christopher Crnich2,3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Telemedicine use in nursing homes (NHs) expanded during the COVID-19 pandemic. The objectives of this study were to characterize plans to continue telemedicine among newly adopting NHs and identify factors limiting its use after COVID-19.Entities:
Keywords: Mixed methods; Nursing home staff; Nursing homes; Organizational enhancements; Providers; SEIPs model; Telemedicine
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35436869 PMCID: PMC9015887 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-022-03046-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 4.070
Nursing home leadership staff perceptions about the value of telemedicine
(A = agreement) (D = disagreement) | |
(A): We certainly don’t want them to be a replacement for the physician being in the building. (Facility A) (A): It’s important for them to see, have a face-to-face, onsite assessment with that physician, … because we do have a lot of complex patients, and … the doctor really needs to put their eyes on them. (Facility E) (D): Perhaps just those routine visits where they’re reviewing their blood sugars, … [and] blood pressures, they’re doing those things that wouldn’t otherwise require a physician visit. It’s probably just as helpful. (Facility A) | |
(A):.If there’s anything that’s urgent, like a cellulitis … we want to quick get in a Zoom visit for, not necessarily have to send someone out, let’s treat them here. Those are very effective for telehealth as well, … and negate transfer to the hospital or an ER visit. (Facility B) (D): Prior to the telehealth, they would call and say … do this … but now with telehealth, [it is] like a special visit that we had to do so that they [provider] could see it. … I don't know that that is a fact …, but I think that they tried to do more telehealth visits than were necessary. (Facility C) | |
(A): It’s a burden on the resident to have to leave the facility to go to a doctor’s appointment, … For our residents, they have to be picked up at a certain time. The vans are on a schedule as well. … And then it’s … making sure that they get into that appointment safely. So [telehealth] removed that out of the picture, and they can just be seen in their room, so certainly much easier (Facility H) (A): [Provider] will not come in the building either, so then we have to send people out. And those are the cases where this telehealth has been amazing not to have to send them out in the community right now for their compliance visits. (Facility H) (A): … especially the dementia residents that we have where it’s hard to get them out to the clinics. It’s better for them just to stay in the … atmosphere that they know… (Facility G) | |
(S): Other things happen … when physicians come, aside from just seeing the resident. There’s a lot of … staff education that happens when physicians are here. We’re asking them questions. They’re educating us about why things are happening. (Facility A) (S): I think it was very limiting in terms of doctors aren't on the unit. They're not sensing what's going on. (Facility C) | |
(A = agreement) (D = disagreement) | |
(A): … if you call and say this person needs to be seen because they had this skin issue, getting in sometimes can be six weeks, … where a telehealth visit can be a quick five minutes, and they can see what’s going on … and …we’re on to the path of recovery much sooner that we would have been. (Facility D) (A): Especially as in, I mean, rural areas, it’s getting harder and harder to find physicians that come out. (Facility A) | |
(A): But if you need that pulmonologist to listen to your lungs, that’s what you miss out on. (Facility B) (A): It changed what they were actually doing during the, our visits. I'm sure they were listening to heartbeat and respirations and bowel sounds and all of that, and that wasn't occurring. (Facility C) (A): I think we’ve seen a lot of infectious disease visits be telehealth and then be easier to obtain. You know, sometimes ID is hard to get into, and having that telehealth option, biweekly or whatnot, reviewing those labs, that kind of thing, is very positive. (Facility B) | |
(A): Some of our skilled patients have more than one doctor … following them. So … you’re not having to go in and out … you’re able to just put them all together and, whether it be orthopedic and a heart doctor … because several of our patients are more complex, so you deal with several comorbidities at the same time. (Facility E) (A): I have the PT [and] …. the nurse there. I got to see the person, got to get input from both of them. And had she come in my office, she couldn’t have told me any of that information, so it was actually a better visit for me than it would’ve been in the clinic (Facility D) (A): And so I think it helps [providers] … have better communication actually with the nurses than it is having them out and then seeing if they come back with paperwork. … And we’re also able to give … our little speech of what’s going on, little summary of how they’re doing, … (Facility E) (D): … [the] whole connection is also lost when you need to do … a palliative care consult and … all of these other end-of-life decisions, and the providers only saw … them via telehealth. To me, that's a huge issue, so, and we're missing a whole group of the treatment plan. (Facility C) | |
(A): … our focus is rehab, getting better. If you have to go out to the doctor for a [visit]… it kind of shoots your whole day for therapy services. (Facility B) (A): A lot of times there was physical therapy going on, and we were sort of going in the middle of it. And … we sort of trumped them so then they'd have to just sit down and wait for us to get finished. Many times that was nice, but it… disrupted their schedule and … their ability to do what they had to do as well. (Facility C) |
Telemedicine work system challenges identified in nursing homes
| 1. Telemedicine platform used by consulting health system sends encounter invite to resident rather than NH staff | • NHs couldn't access resident's email or electronic patient portal to obtain visit links for telemedicine encounter • Many consulting providers lacked access to NH EHR | |
| 2. Internet connectivity issues | ||
| 3. Lack of EHR interoperability between NH & health system | ||
| 1. Difficulty scheduling telemedicine encounters | • NHs often lacked access to a centralized scheduling system/process • Providers and/or their clinic staff had to make multiple attempts to contact resident’s nurse in order to schedule a telemedicine appointment • Multiple NH staff had the ability to schedule resident appointments resulting in residents being double-booked (e.g., physical therapy session and telemedicine encounter) | |
| 2. Training staff on new technology | ||
| 3. NH staff had to learn how to navigate different telemedicine platforms | ||
| 4. High information exchange demand from provider | • Many providers, even those with NH EHR access, preferred to receive information verbally from the NH staff • NH staff often required staff to provide the same information to the provider’s clinic staff prepping the encounter and again to the provider at the beginning of the encounter | |
| 1. Telemedicine encounters are less effective for residents with auditory, visual, and/or cognitive impairments | ||
| 2. Telemedicine encounters were less effective when facilitated by a non- clinical staff member | • Limited availability of clinical staff prompted facilities to use non-clinical staff to facilitate telemedicine encounters • Non-clinical staff unable to provide same level of information exchange as clinical staff and were unable to perform critical aspects of the physical exam | |
| 3. Telemedicine results in a loss of personal connection | ||
| 4. Some residents prefer face-to-face visits | ||
| 1.Telemedicine services increased NH staff workload | • Telemedicine created new tasks (e.g., prepping, facilitating) that were simply added on top of other resident care responsibilities | |
| 2. Access to appropriate types and/or amounts of equipment to conduct telemedicine encounters effectively | • Facilities often lacked access to the most effective equipment for conducting telemedicine encounters • Facilities lacked the financial resources to purchase needed equipment • Equipment used for other purposes was often repurposed for telemedicine encounters | |
| 3. Challenges with coordinating resident, staff, and provider schedules | • Telemedicine encounters benefited most from having a clinical staff member present, but these individuals often had competing responsibilities • Provider clinics often requested encounter times that conflicted with critical facility meetings (e.g., morning standup) and resident care activities (e.g., physical therapy) | |
| 4. Limited IT support | • Nursing home staff were often hindered by a lack of support from internal or corporate information technology staff especially as it related to the limited access to the telemedicine software | |
| 5. Billing Issues | • NHs could only submit reimbursement for successfully implemented telemedicine visits that were conducted by video. Encounters where providers directly called the resident or who converted from a video to telephone modality precluded submission of an origination charge • Perception that some providers used telemedicine as a billing opportunity | |
| 1. Resident rooms were not ideal for conducting telemedicine encounters | • NH staff felt that the physical aspects of the resident’s room including the absence of furniture to support equipment positioning to allow the provider to see the patient along with poor lighting and the small screen size combined to impact the quality of the telemedicine encounter | |
| 1. Each Healthcare system utilized a different platform | • Since each health care system utilized a different telehealth platform, the impact on NH staff was significant because they had to learn different scheduling systems, different telemedicine platforms, and to understand the preferred clinic telemedicine visit preparation requirements | |
| 2. Uncertain regulatory environment | • NHs were initially uncertain about HIPAA and privacy requirements surrounding telemedicine and whether their facilities were covered |
NH Nursing Home, EHR Electronic Health Record
Fig. 1Contextualizing telemedicine work system challenges within the SEIPs 2.0 model
Provider perceived advantages and disadvantages of telemedicine in nursing homes
NH Nursing Home, POA Power of Attorney
Shaded rows represent differences in concordance between APPs and subspecialist regarding the specific advantage or disadvantage of telemedicine use in the Nursing Home
Investments and enhancements needed to make nursing home telemedicine encounters easier and more effective
| Category of Enhancements | NH Staff ( | UW APPs ( | Subspecialist ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| NHs should invest in dedicated and adequate/appropriate equipment to conduct telemedicine visit (e.g., laptop or tablet) | 6/9 | 3/8 | 7/7 |
| Telemedicine visits could be enhanced through purchasing and making available sound amplification devices for use with hard of hearing individuals | 5/9 | 7/8 | 6/7 |
| Telemedicine visits could be enhanced through the availability of a stethoscope device to conduct remote heart and lung exams | 0/9 | 7/8 | 1/7 |
| Telemedicine equipment should have enhanced video capabilities to allow for a better view of the patient on camera | 2/9 | N/A | 2/7 |
| NHs should invest in the infrastructure necessary to support telemedicine visits through improved connectivity and bandwidth | 1/9 | 5/8 | 7/7 |
| NHs should develop or invest in an improved and standardized system for scheduling telemedicine visits | 7/9 | 5/8 | 2/7 |
| NHs should designate a point person to schedule telemedicine visits | 6/9 | N/A | 1/7 |
| NHs should consider scheduling telemedicine visits in pre-determined blocks of time with adequate pre and post visit time to allow for NH staff prep and follow-up | 3/9 | N/A | 2/7 |
| NHs and providers should work together to provide remote access to NH electronic health records to facilitate telemedicine visit preparation and pre-charting activities | 4/9 | 4/8 | 2/7 |
| NHs should create policies and procedures that template the expectations about how a telemedicine should be conducted | 2/9 | N/A | 3/7 |
| NHs should identify and dedicate staff to facilitate telemedicine visits | 6/9 | 7/8 | 6/7 |
| NH telemedicine encounter facilitator should be a clinician (I.e., RN or LPN) who can conduct telemedicine visit requested assessments making the visits more efficient and effective | 5/9 | 7/8 | 6/7 |
APPs Advanced Practice Providers, NH Nursing Home, N/A Not applicable because the code or item was not addressed in the quantitative APP survey