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Benefits and challenges of telemedicine for heart failure consultations: a qualitative study
by
Cowie, Martin R.
, Riley, Jillian P.
, Singhal, Arvind
in
Care and treatment
/ COVID-19
/ Digital health
/ Disease transmission
/ Evaluation
/ Health Administration
/ Health care
/ Health Informatics
/ Health services
/ Heart failure
/ Hospitals
/ Interviews
/ Medical care
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Nursing Research
/ Patient outcomes
/ Patients
/ Public Health
/ Qualitative
/ Qualitative research
/ Quality management
/ Remote consultation
/ Research Article
/ Telehealth
/ Telemedicine
/ Video teleconferencing
2023
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Benefits and challenges of telemedicine for heart failure consultations: a qualitative study
by
Cowie, Martin R.
, Riley, Jillian P.
, Singhal, Arvind
in
Care and treatment
/ COVID-19
/ Digital health
/ Disease transmission
/ Evaluation
/ Health Administration
/ Health care
/ Health Informatics
/ Health services
/ Heart failure
/ Hospitals
/ Interviews
/ Medical care
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Nursing Research
/ Patient outcomes
/ Patients
/ Public Health
/ Qualitative
/ Qualitative research
/ Quality management
/ Remote consultation
/ Research Article
/ Telehealth
/ Telemedicine
/ Video teleconferencing
2023
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Do you wish to request the book?
Benefits and challenges of telemedicine for heart failure consultations: a qualitative study
by
Cowie, Martin R.
, Riley, Jillian P.
, Singhal, Arvind
in
Care and treatment
/ COVID-19
/ Digital health
/ Disease transmission
/ Evaluation
/ Health Administration
/ Health care
/ Health Informatics
/ Health services
/ Heart failure
/ Hospitals
/ Interviews
/ Medical care
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Nursing Research
/ Patient outcomes
/ Patients
/ Public Health
/ Qualitative
/ Qualitative research
/ Quality management
/ Remote consultation
/ Research Article
/ Telehealth
/ Telemedicine
/ Video teleconferencing
2023
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Benefits and challenges of telemedicine for heart failure consultations: a qualitative study
Journal Article
Benefits and challenges of telemedicine for heart failure consultations: a qualitative study
2023
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Overview
Background
Prior to the Covid-19 pandemic, heart failure (HF) disease management programmes were predominantly delivered in-person, with telemedicine being uncommon. Covid-19 resulted in a rapid shift to “remote-by-default” clinic appointments in many organisations. We evaluated clinician and patient experiences of teleconsultations for HF.
Methods
From 16th March 2020, all HF appointments at a specialist centre in the UK were telemedicine-by-default through a mixture of telephone and video consultations, with rare in-person appointments. HF clinicians and patients with HF were invited to participate in semi-structured interviews about their experiences. A purposive sampling technique was used. Interviews were conducted using Microsoft Teams®, recorded and transcribed verbatim. Narrative data were explored by thematic analysis. Clinicians and patients were interviewed until themes saturated.
Results
Eight clinicians and eight patients with HF were interviewed before themes saturated. Five overarching themes emerged: 1) Time utilisation – telemedicine consultations saved patients time travelling to and waiting for appointments. Clinicians perceived them to be more efficient, but more administrative time was involved. 2) Clinical assessment – without physical examination, clinicians relied more on history, observations and test results; video calls were perceived as superior to telephone calls for remote assessment. Patients confident in self-monitoring tended to be more comfortable with telemedicine. 3) Communication and rapport – clinicians experienced difficulty establishing rapport with new patients by telephone, though video was better. Patients generally did not perceive that remote consultation affected their rapport with clinicians. 4) Technology – connection issues occasionally disrupted video consultations, but overall patients and clinicians found the technology easy to use. 5) Choice and flexibility – both patients and clinicians believed that the choice of modality should be situation-dependent.
Conclusions
Telemedicine HF consultations were more convenient for patients, saved them time, and were generally acceptable to clinicians, but changed workflows, consultation dynamics, and how clinical assessment was performed. Telemedicine should be used alongside in-person appointments in a “hybrid” model tailored to individual patients and settings.
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