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96,610 result(s) for "Rural health care"
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Lower electronic health record adoption and interoperability in rural versus urban physician participants: a cross-sectional analysis from the CMS quality payment program
Background The Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act of 2009 introduced the Meaningful Use program to incentivize the adoption of electronic health records (EHRs) in the U.S. This study investigates the disparities in EHR adoption and interoperability between rural and urban physicians in the context of federal programs like the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 and the 21st Century Cures Act. Methods A cross-sectional analysis was conducted using the 2021 Quality Payment Program Experience Report Public Use File to compare EHR adoption and Promoting Interoperability scores (PISs) between urban and rural physician participants. Data were linked with the Certified Health IT Product List to assess certified EHR adoption and interoperability. Results The study included 209,152 physician participants, 12% of whom practiced in rural communities. EHR adoption was significantly higher in urban (74%) than in rural areas (64%). Epic Systems dominated the market in both settings. Multivariable logistic regression indicated lower odds of EHR adoption among rural physicians (OR: 0.79, CI: 0.76–0.82). Rural physicians also had lower PISs (β: –3.5, CI: –4.1 to –3.0). Factors like extreme hardship, small practitioner status, and location in a health professional shortage area significantly impacted EHR adoption and PISs. Conclusions Significant disparities exist in EHR adoption and interoperability between rural and urban physicians. These disparities highlight the need for targeted interventions to enhance EHR adoption and interoperability in rural settings to ensure equitable access to healthcare technologies and improved patient outcomes across all communities.
Telemedicine-based outpatient consultations for hypertension management in rural areas of Kazakhstan
Background Hypertension is a leading cause of cardiovascular morbidity and premature mortality worldwide. Limited access to specialist care in rural areas contributes to suboptimal blood pressure control and persistent healthcare disparities. Telemedicine offers a potential solution to bridge this gap. Methods This retrospective observational study assessed the feasibility of WhatsApp-based teleconsultations for managing arterial hypertension in rural Kazakhstan. The intervention was conducted in three remote villages served by a district medical center. Patients with uncontrolled hypertension or cardiovascular symptoms were referred for remote cardiology consultations via WhatsApp, integrated with the national electronic health record system. Data on clinical decisions, treatment modifications, and patient self-monitoring behaviors were analyzed. A patient satisfaction survey was conducted between September and December 2024. Results A total of 78 patients with arterial hypertension were included. Most consultations were conducted at patients’ homes using smartphones. Stage 3 hypertension was observed in 63% of participants. Treatment adjustments were made in 73.1% of cases following teleconsultation. Gender differences were identified in self-monitoring practices, with women more likely to perform regular home blood pressure monitoring. Among 54 respondents, 82% reported convenience of teleconsultations, and 63% expressed high satisfaction with the quality of care. Conclusions Mobile-based teleconsultation using widely available messaging platforms is a feasible and acceptable approach that may improve access to specialist care. This model demonstrates potential for integration into primary healthcare systems to support hypertension management in resource-limited environments. Further studies are needed to evaluate clinical outcomes and long-term effectiveness. Trial registration Not applicable.
Attitudes toward depression among rural primary healthcare providers in hunan areas, China: a cross sectional study
Background Mental health services are not sufficient for depression patients in rural areas of China, training in mental health knowledge for primary healthcare providers has been encouraged, but the effect of this encouragement has rarely been reported. Methods A cross-sectional survey was conducted in primary healthcare facilities that sought to include all the primary healthcare providers (registered physicians and nurses) in two cities in Hunan province, China by administering questionnaires that covered depression symptoms, typical depression cases, and the Revised Depression Attitude Questionnaire. Results In total, 315 primary healthcare providers agreed to participate in the study and finished the questionnaires, of which 12.1% had training in depression. In addition, 62.9% of the rural primary healthcare providers were able to recognize most general depression symptoms, and 8.3% were able to recognize all general depression symptoms. The primary healthcare providers in the survey held a neutral to slightly negative attitude towards depression as indicated by their professional confidence (mean scores 16.51 ± 4.30), therapeutic optimism/pessimism (mean scores 29.02 ± 5.98), and general perspective (mean scores 18.12 ± 3.12) scores. Fewer rural primary healthcare providers knew (28.3%) or applied (2.9%) psychological intervention in the clinic. Conclusions Our study indicated that primary healthcare providers knew about general depression symptoms, but lacked psychological intervention skills and held low confidence in and pessimistic attitudes toward depression care. We therefore speculate that existing psychological training for primary healthcare providers is insufficient in quantity and quality, making the need to explore more effective types of training urgently.
Mixed methods systematic review of consumer engagement in rural health practice, research, and education
Abstract This systematic review aimed to synthesize evidence on consumer engagement in rural health practice, research, and education. It was conducted using the JBI mixed methods methodology, specifically the convergent integrated approach. PubMed, PsychINFO, Cochrane Library, SCOPUS, Web of Science, EMBASE, and CINAHL were searched, along with gray literature sources—Google, ProQuest Dissertation, and Theses Global. Primary research studies published globally in English, from 2011 to 2024 were included. Dual reviewer screening occurred in two stages, title and abstract, then followed by full text. Critical appraisals of included studies were undertaken using McMaster Critical Appraisal Tool for quantitative and qualitative studies, respectively, and the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool. Extracted data was synthesized to develop themes for reporting per the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines. This review identified 25 studies that explored the top three levels of consumer involvement in rural healthcare settings, namely Partnership, Involving, and Consumer-led, adapted from the 2011 National Framework for Consumer Involvement in Cancer Control. Five key themes were developed from the data: positive impacts of co-design, importance of relationship building, sustainability of interventions, power issues in co-design, and the importance of context. Findings showed that interventions utilizing the top three partnership levels (consumer-led, partnership, and involving) consistently lead to positive impacts on health outcomes of rural communities with higher levels of sustained engagement. Enablers and barriers were identified and categorized into a macro, micro, and meso framework for direct comparison between studies. Rural healthcare initiatives involving consumer engagement appear to have several benefits including strengthening community-researcher relationships, enhanced sustainability, and enriching local contexts while addressing power imbalances to enhance healthcare outcomes.
The place of rural hospitals in New Zealand's health system: An exploratory qualitative study
Introduction: In Aotearoa New Zealand (NZ) there is a knowledge gap regarding the place and contribution of rural hospitals in the health system. New Zealanders residing in rural areas have poorer health outcomes than those living in urban areas, and this is accentuated for Maori, the Indigenous people of the country. There is no current description of rural hospital services, no national policies and little published research regarding their role or value. Around 15% of New Zealanders rely on rural hospitals for health care. The purpose of this exploratory study was to understand national rural hospital leadership perspectives on the place of rural hospitals in the NZ health system. Methods: A qualitative exploratory study was undertaken. The leadership of each rural hospital and national rural stakeholder organisations were invited to participate in virtual semi-structured interviews. The interviews explored participants' views of the rural hospital context, the strengths and challenges they faced and how good rural hospital care might look. Thematic analysis was undertaken using a framework-guided rapid analysis method. Results: Twenty-seven semi-structured interviews were conducted by videoconference. Two broad themes were identified, as follows. Theme 1, 'Our place and our people', reflected the local, on-the-ground situation. Across a broad variety of rural hospitals, geographical distance from specialist health services and community connectedness were the common key influencers of a rural hospital's response. Local services were provided by small, adaptable teams across broad scopes and blurred primary-secondary care boundaries, with acute and inpatient care a key component. Rural hospitals acted as a conduit between community-based care and city-based secondary or tertiary hospital care. Theme 2, 'Our positioning in the wider health system', related to the external wider environment that rural hospitals worked within. Rural hospitals operating at the margins of the health system faced multiple challenges in trying to align with the urban-centric regulatory systems and processes they were dependent on. They described their position as being 'at the end of the dripline'. In contrast to their local connectedness, in the wider health system participants felt rural hospitals were undervalued and invisible. While the study found strengths and challenges common to all NZ rural hospitals, there were also variations between them. Conclusion: This study furthers understanding of the place of rural hospitals in the NZ healthcare system as seen through a national rural hospital lens. Rural hospitals are well placed to provide an integrative role in locality service provision, with many already long established in performing this role. However, context-specific national policy for rural hospitals is urgently needed to ensure their sustainability. Further research should be undertaken to understand the role of NZ rural hospitals in addressing healthcare inequities for those living in rural areas, particularly for Maori.
Comparative Study on the Satisfaction of Healthcare Service Providers with the Synergistic Development of Rural Healthcare Systems in China: Medical Alliance Counties vs. Non-Medical Alliance Counties
Introduction: This study aimed to explore whether the establishment of county medical alliances can improve satisfaction with the vertical integration of healthcare systems among rural medical and healthcare service provider managers and service providers. Our study also sought to provide recommendations for the sustainable development of vertical integration in healthcare systems. Methods: A semi-structured interview with 30 healthcare service providers was employed in this research, and Nvivo software was utilized to analyze factors that influence vertical integration. From April to July 2021, a multi-stage random sampling method was used to select participants. The sample included two leading hospitals in medical consortia, 15 member units (healthcare service providers and medical staff), two county-level hospitals, and 15 township health centers/community healthcare service centers from non-medical consortia. Questionnaire surveys were conducted with these groups. Factor analysis was used to calculate satisfaction scores for healthcare service providers with the cross-institutional synergistic development of healthcare systems in both medical and non-medical consortia (denoted as M(IQR)). Propensity score matching was employed to reduce confounding factors between groups. The Mann-Whitney U test was used to compare satisfaction differences between groups. Results: The overall satisfaction scores for lead-county hospital managers, member institution managers, medical staff at the lead-county hospital, and medical staff at member institutions were 4.80 (1.00), 4.17 (1.17), 4.00 (1.38), and 4.00 (1.12), respectively. Lead-county hospital managers’ satisfaction with cross-institutional collaboration, development capacity enhancement, and structure and resource integration in the Medical Alliance group showed higher satisfaction than the Non-Medical Alliance. Similarly, lead-county hospital medical staff in the Medical Alliance group reported greater satisfaction with collaboration efforts, supportive environment, and development capacity enhancement. Notably, while the Medical Alliance group’s satisfaction scores were higher, the differences between the two groups were not statistically significant for lead-county hospital managers and medical staff. The Medical Alliance group did show statistically significant differences in member institution managers’ satisfaction with collaboration, development capacity enhancement, and structure and resource integration. Additionally, medical staff of member institutions in the Medical Alliance group reported statistically significant higher satisfaction with collaboration, supportive environment, development capacity enhancement, healthcare service integration, and human resource development. Conclusion: To facilitate the establishment of county medical alliances, managers of leading county-level hospitals should adopt a healthcare system integration strategy. This strategy involves evolution from being a member of a single institution to a coordinator of cross-institutional vertical integration of medical and healthcare services. Additionally, revamping remuneration and appraisal systems for members of county medical alliances is necessary. This will encourage cooperation among healthcare institutions within the three-tiered system and their medical staff, ultimately facilitating the provision of integrated services.
Worlds apart: a socio-material exploration of mHealth in rural areas of developing countries
PurposeThe implementation of mobile health (mHealth) in developing countries seems to be stuck in a pattern of successive pilot studies that struggle for mainstream implementation. This study addresses the research question: what existing health-related structures, properties and practices are presented by rural areas of developing countries that might inhibit the implementation of mHealth initiatives?Design/methodology/approachThis study was conducted using a socio-material approach, based on an exploratory case study in West Africa. Interviews and participant observation were used to gather data. A thematic analysis identified important social and material agencies, practices and imbrications which may limit the effectiveness of mHealth apps in the region.FindingsFindings show that, while urban healthcare is highly structured, best practice-led, rural healthcare relies on peer-based knowledge sharing, and community support. This has implications for the enacted materiality of mobile technologies. While urban actors see mHealth as a tool for automation and the enforcement of responsible healthcare best practice, rural actors see mHealth as a tool for greater interconnectivity and independent, decentralised care.Research limitations/implicationsThis study has two significant limitations. First, the study focussed on a region where technology-enabled guideline-driven treatment is the main mHealth concern. Second, consistent with the exploratory nature of this study, the qualitative methodology and the single-case design, the study makes no claim to statistical generalisability.Originality/valueTo the authors' knowledge, this is the first study to adopt a socio-material view that considers existing structures and practices that may influence the widespread adoption and assimilation of a new mHealth app. This helps identify contextual challenges that are limiting the potential of mHealth to improve outcomes in rural areas of developing countries.
Impact of Internet Hospital Consultations on Outpatient Visits and Expenses: Quasi-Experimental Study
Internet hospital consultations are emerging in China as a new channel for patients to access health care services. Unlike third-party health care platforms such as Haodf, Teladoc Health, and MDLive, internet hospitals seamlessly integrate patients' offline medical records with online consultations, offering a cohesive online and offline health care experience. However, its impact on outpatient visits remains ambiguous. While it may encourage outpatient visits due to better continuity of care, it could also reduce face-to-face visits because of the convenience of online consultations. Given that patients in China have the autonomy to freely choose their health care providers, it is critical for hospitals to understand the effect of this telehealth technology on outpatient visits. This study aimed to analyze the impact of patients' adoption of internet hospital consultations on their outpatient frequency and expenses, and whether these impacts vary between urban and rural patients. The data used in this study were collected from a public tertiary hospital situated in a southeastern county of China, covering internet hospital consultations from January 2021 to October 2022, and offline outpatient records from January 2020 to October 2022. The dataset also includes patient demographic information. To estimate the causal effect, we used a quasi-experimental design, combining the difference-in-differences (DiD) analysis with the propensity score matching (PSM). After performing PSM, 2065 pairs of patients (4130 patients) were obtained for data analysis. Our findings highlight 3 key results. First, patients' adoption of internet hospital consultations increases their frequency of outpatient visits by 2.4% per month (P<.001), and the associated expenses by 15.5% per month (P<.001). Second, such positive effects are more pronounced for patients residing in rural areas. Specifically, for every 1% increase in the distance between patients' residences and the county government (an urban center), the positive effect on monthly outpatient visits increases by 0.3% (P=.06), and the positive effect on monthly outpatient expenses increases by 2.4% (P=.03). Third, our post hoc analysis shows that rural patients living in areas with higher local health care quality experience a mitigated positive effect of internet hospital consultations, compared with those in areas with lower health care quality. This study extends the research scope of telehealth technologies by investigating internet hospitals, which are characterized by the integration of online and offline services. Our findings suggest that patients' adoption of internet hospital consultations is associated with an increase in both the frequency and expenses of outpatient visits. In addition, these effects vary based on patients' urban-rural status and local health care quality. These insights offer valuable guidance for policy makers and health care providers in promoting and optimizing the development and operation of internet hospitals.
Efficacy of educational interventions on improving medical emergency readiness of rural healthcare providers: a scoping review
Background Medical emergencies are the leading cause of high mortality and morbidity rates in rural areas of higher and lower-income countries than in urban areas. Medical emergency readiness is healthcare providers’ knowledge, skills, and confidence to meet patients’ emergency needs. Rural healthcare professionals’ medical emergency readiness is imperative to prevent or reduce casualties due to medical emergencies. Evidence shows that rural healthcare providers’ emergency readiness needs enhancement. Education and training are the effective ways to improve them. However, there has yet to be a scoping review to understand the efficacy of educational intervention regarding rural healthcare providers’ medical emergency readiness. Objectives This scoping review aimed to identify and understand the effectiveness of educational interventions in improving rural healthcare providers’ medical emergency readiness globally. Methods The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for scoping reviews were used to select the papers for this scoping review. This scoping review was conducted using MEDLINE, CINHAL, SCOPUS, PUBMED and OVID databases. The Population, Intervention, Comparison and Outcome [PICO] strategies were used to select the papers from the database. The selected papers were limited to English, peer-reviewed journals and published from 2013 to 2023. A total of 536 studies were retrieved, and ten studies that met the selection criteria were included in the review. Three reviewers appraised the selected papers individually using the Joanna Briggs Institute [JBI] critical appraisal tool. A descriptive method was used to analyse the data. Results From the identified 536 papers, the ten papers which met the PICO strategies were selected for the scoping review. Results show that rural healthcare providers’ emergency readiness remains the same globally. All interventions were effective in enhancing rural health care providers’ medical emergency readiness, though the interventions were implemented at various durations of time and in different foci of medical emergencies. Results showed that the low-fidelity simulated manikins were the most cost-effective intervention to train rural healthcare professionals globally. Conclusion The review concluded that rural healthcare providers’ medical emergency readiness improved after the interventions. However, the limitations associated with the studies caution readers to read the results sensibly. Moreover, future research should focus on understanding the interventions’ behavioural outcomes, especially among rural healthcare providers in low to middle-income countries.