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Focusing on experts: Expectations of healthcare professionals regarding the use of telemedicine in intensive care units

[journal article]

Eitenberger, Magdalena
Gerger, Gernot
Klomfar, Sophie
Gabriel, Marcus Alexander
Kletecka-Pulker, Maria
Schaden, Eva
Atanasov, Atanas G.
Maleczek, Mathias
Völkl-Kernstock, Sabine
Klager, Elisabeth

Abstract

Objectives: Telemedical applications are solutions to challenges in the healthcare system. However, it is unclear what intensive care unit healthcare professionals expect from such solutions. This study investigated the expectations and concerns of nurses and physicians when implementing telemedicin... view more

Objectives: Telemedical applications are solutions to challenges in the healthcare system. However, it is unclear what intensive care unit healthcare professionals expect from such solutions. This study investigated the expectations and concerns of nurses and physicians when implementing telemedicine tools in intensive care units (tele-ICU). Methods: The study was conducted in intensive care units in 2020 during the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic. It used a mixed-methods approach targeted at physicians and nurses and involved 14 qualitative interviews and 63 quantitative questionnaires. Results: The qualitative and quantitative data showed that both nurses and physicians were willing to use tele-ICU. Nurses recognised the advantages of real-time access to expertise offered by tele-ICU, but feared this would reduce physicians’ on-site patient time. Physicians, in turn, were concerned that they would be expected to be continuously on call. The majority in both groups agreed that any tele-ICU solution must be simple to use and integrate easily into existing organisational structures, networks, and work routines. Additionally, COVID-19 significantly influenced expectations: those who reported having more personal health concerns during the pandemic were more predisposed to favour the use of tele-ICU. Conclusions: Overall, tele-ICU supports better care, but a successful implementation depends on its ease of use and context-sensitive approaches. Effectively integrating tele-ICU solutions into daily clinical routines requires input from nurses and physicians and their involvement in the implementation process from the outset, as well as consideration of existing organisational structures. Such measures will vastly increase the chance of acceptance and successful adoption of telemedical solutions in clinical practice.... view less

Keywords
intensive care medicine; new technology; medical technology; digitalization; health professionals; nursing staff; physician; attitude; acceptance

Classification
Medical Sociology

Free Keywords
Telemedicine; mixed-methods; digital health; intensive care technology; implementation; Allgemeine Arbeitszufriedenheit (ZIS1, doi:10.6102/zis1)

Document language
English

Publication Year
2024

Journal
Digital Health, 10 (2024)

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/20552076241257042

ISSN
2055-2076

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0


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Home  |  Legal notices  |  Operational concept  |  Privacy policy
© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.