| Literature DB >> 35503140 |
Victoria White1, Alice Bastable2, Ilana Solo3, Seleena Sherwell4, Sangeetha Thomas5, Rob Blum3,6, Javier Torres7, Natalie Maxwell-Davis8, Kathy Alexander8, Amanda Piper2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In response to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, telehealth was rapidly rolled out in health services across Australia including those delivering cancer care. This study aimed to understand people with cancer and carers' experiences with telehealth for cancer care during the COVID-19 pandemic and associated restrictions.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Carers; Patient experiences; Qualitative research; Telehealth
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35503140 PMCID: PMC9062284 DOI: 10.1007/s00520-022-07021-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Support Care Cancer ISSN: 0941-4355 Impact factor: 3.359
Participant cancer, health system, sex, residential location, and format for telehealth characteristics
| Characteristic | ||
|---|---|---|
| Participant type | Patient | 23 |
| Carer | 5 | |
| Sex | Male | 13 |
| Female | 15 | |
| Residential location | Metropolitan | 21 |
| Regional | 7 | |
| Health system | Public | 21 |
| Private | 7 | |
| Cancer type (patients) | Prostate | 5 |
| Breast | 5 | |
| Ovarian | 3 | |
| Lung and mesothelioma | 3 | |
| Blood | 2 | |
| Other | 5 | |
| Cancer stage in 2020 | Treatment | 8 |
| Follow-up/monitoring | 15 | |
| Telehealth format | Telephone | 18 |
| Mix | 6 | |
| Video | 4 | |
Exemplar quotes relating to the theme of benefits of telehealth
| Subtheme | Exemplar quote |
|---|---|
| Reduced travel | Convenience of not having to travel to [hospital] and paying a $20.00 parking fee. (P11) |
| I have to allow a lot more time for actually getting there and getting home [for in person appointments]. There is also the cost factor, both the economic and time costs. (P2) | |
| If it [telehealth] works that’s a great way for anyone who’s a long way away from the hospital because you have other anxieties as well. Things like having to go through peak hour traffic, it can be rather wearing if you’re not use to it. That’s one of the benefits of telehealth because you don’t have to do that. You don’t have the build up of tension, which is one good benefit, there is also no waiting time. (P2) | |
| Reduced costs | Financially advantageous, because it was bulk billed. (P13) |
| We never got a bill for them [telehealth appointments]. (P15) | |
| Reduced downtime/stress | If they are running late, you’re in your own home so you can keep pottering around chipping away at all the jobs that need to be done. So you don’t feel like you lose huge portions of your day like you do when you’re there in person. … The removal of travel time which gives you back more time in your day. But also because [my husband] is full time in a wheelchair, it’s hard work getting into the car and driving into the hospital and getting him to the doctors rooms. (C1) |
| Convenient if not feeling well | It’s also very helpful when you’re feeling sick and tired because the last thing you want to do is get out of bed or get off the couch. You know you’re going to vomit or you’re going to have diarrhea from the chemo, so you don’t want to be in a car for half an hour. A lot of times those mornings I was grateful that I could do a telehealth. (P3) |
| Kept me safe | They [telehealth] worked really well and kept me safe. (P10) |
Exemplar quotes for subthemes in the ‘quality of care concerns’ theme
| Subtheme | Exemplar quotes |
|---|---|
| Transactional | I feel the phone is just a bit too quick and not treated like a real appointment. (P7) |
| Its not particularly patient centric, pretty transactional (P13) | |
| I wouldn’t say it was rushed but it felt incomplete. I got to the end of the phone call and they knew a bit more about me, but I didn’t know what the next steps were. And it is hard to get a feel for what an organisation is like, when you are doing it over the phone. (P5) | |
| There was no rapport, no nothing, it was just business (P3) | |
| You have to have a list of questions that you want to ask because it’s very easy to forget until after you finished the call, “I should have said this, or I should have said that. So I think you have to go in prepared. (P6) | |
| What I have found with the telephone consultation they tended to be, not superficial, but they didn’t really encourage going into depth. (P2) | |
| But if you as a patient can’t say to your doctor: Look, I felt really sick yesterday, I was feeling better today and the reason I’m feeling that way is because this, this and this. You’ve got to be able to say that to them regardless. It doesn’t matter whether they’re on the phone or whether you’re sitting in front of them. (P26) | |
| No real difference because I have a good relationship with the doctors anyway. I tend to research things so if I have a question, I can raise it. (P14) | |
| Difficult for rapport | I found them adequate but they were just adequate….. I would have preferred video rather than telephone, because I find that having the visual connection as well as the verbal connection adds to the discussion. (P2) |
| I think that is the thing, trying to get a rapport with a doctor you don’t know is pretty impossible over the phone…..(P5) | |
| I thought that telehealth delivers a great service, but it was very impersonal at first. (P10) | |
| Suitability for appointment type | It [cancer diagnosis] was the worst thing anyone could possibly say to us so it’s a lot easier for us if someone was looking at us and explaining what our situation is in a face to face manner, than over the phone. (C4) |
| I would be quite happy to go with telehealth but if I had more pressing problems I would probably opt for face-to-face. (P12) | |
| I prefer face to face, unless it’s just for a script or something, I would use it to renew a script. It's important to have that face to face [consultation] (C3) | |
| Adequate for monitoring? | I didn’t have an examination for the year of COVID and that did cause me some concern even though my CA 125 is so low. So I think any doctor would say it’s fine, not having examination. But it did cause me some concern (P9) |
| When you walk into a surgery, doctors are taking your appearance in, when they talk to you on the phone or looking at you on video they don’t get a real picture of what you are actually doing, how you are looking. They don’t get an accurate picture of you as a person and what is actually happening. They don’t see you get out of a chair, drink a cup of coffee. (P10) | |
| When I had a face-to-face consultation, I was able to have a much more thorough conversation, which bought out an issue that was concerning me to do with bowel function which led me to have a colonoscopy which then found pre-cancerous polyps. (P13) |
Exemplar quotes relating to themes: ‘Where do carers fit?’ and ‘optimising telehealth’s inclusion’
| Theme | Exemplar quote |
|---|---|
| Involving carers | I feel I need to be at appointment to ask the questions so it's very hard, with telehealth for us both to be there at the same time. It’s easy to say “I can't come to work today because I'm going to the hospital then to say “I need time off [for telehealth consultation] because it’s like a phone call” (C4) |
| The biggest problem that I have with it is that my husband couldn’t come into my treatment consultations with me. He has been with me from the beginning at every consultation but in the telehealth ones of course he’s not necessarily around to be involved. He has missed that particularly because I have to relay information to him second hand. And sometimes you forget what you want to tell the doctor …quite often he would back me up and say you have forgotten to tell her [doctor] about such and such. Quite often your carer will come up with questions that I hadn’t thought of, and I think that is what we miss more than anything with the telehealth. (P11) | |
| A couple of times I pop them on speaker phone so my friend can hear. My friend noticed that I was forgetting a lot of information that they would tell me, so I needed a second pair of ears. (P3) | |
| The doctor, especially when I do these video-conference things they should be aware that carers could be there. So I think the doctor or the specialist should be saying ‘is your wife/husband there?’ and they should bring them into the conversation straightaway, instead of me saying ‘my wife is here’ (P18) | |
| Optimal inclusion of telehealth | There’s probably a bit of criticism around telehealth, but I think it’s it is a really great format. Really something that should be rolled out. (P1) |
| I know it’s subsidized by the government, but I think the option should be there for [telehealth] to be kept on, to give people the option. (P18) | |
| I think video health that would be, that’s the only way I can do it. I don’t think I’d do telephone. (P1) | |
| video would be better [then telephone] because it’s nice to see who you are speaking to (P6) | |
| Making sure that the health system gives people the option of what type of appointment they want, but also providing people with the information about when is a good time for a telehealth appointment versus when a face-to-face appointment is needed (P11) | |
| “The opportunity for telehealth or maybe every second or third visit be a face to face so that you can still build that rapport with your clinician. (P21) | |
| I think it should be a mix of telehealth and face to face contact, because you have to go in for your scans. Not losing physical contact is important, often you think about things on the spot or you can have a question answered. I like the telehealth, but you need a mixture of both. If people like physical examinations, they shouldn’t be doing telehealth. If it’s just about the return of results I think you could do that on telehealth. (P2) | |
| It would help if they gave some instructions on how it’s going to go, this would also help your partner. ….. Using telehealth there were no instructions on how the meetings were going to run or what was going to happen. You didn’t know if your partner could be there or anything like that. (P8) |