Shah Amika, Guessi Milena, Wali Sahr, Ware Patrick, McDonald Michael, O'Sullivan Mary, Posada Juan Duero, Ross Heather, Seto Emily
Centre for Global eHealth Innovation, Techna Institute, University Health Network, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
JMIR Cardio. 2021 May 5;5(1):e25277. doi: 10.2196/25277.
Virtual care has historically faced barriers to widespread adoption. However, the COVID-19 pandemic has necessitated the rapid adoption and expansion of virtual care technologies. Although the intense and prolonged nature of the COVID-19 pandemic has renewed people's interest in health systems resilience, which includes how services adapt or transform in response to shocks, evidence regarding the role of virtual care technologies in health systems resilience is scarce.
At Toronto General Hospital in Ontario, Canada, the rapid virtualization of cardiac care began on March 9, 2020, as a response to the pandemic. The objective of this study was to understand people's experiences with and the barriers and facilitators of the rapid virtualization and expansion of cardiac care resulting from the pandemic.
A single-case study was conducted with 3 embedded units of analysis. Patients, clinicians, and staff were recruited purposively from an existing mobile, phone-based telemonitoring program at a heart function clinic in Toronto, Canada. Individual, semistructured phone interviews were conducted by two researchers and transcribed verbatim. An inductive thematic analysis at the semantic level was used to analyze transcripts and develop themes.
A total of 29 participants were interviewed, including patients (n=16), clinicians (n=9), and staff (n=4). The following five themes were identified: (1) patient safety as a catalyst for virtual care adoption; (2) piecemeal virtual care solutions; (3) confronting new roles and workloads; (4) missing pieces in virtual care; and (5) the inequity paradox. The motivation to protect patient safety and a piecemeal approach to virtual care adoption facilitated the absorptive and adaptive resilience of cardiac care during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, ad hoc changes to clinic roles and workflows, challenges in building relationships through remote methods, and widened inequities were barriers that threatened virtual care sustainment.
We contend that sustaining virtual care hinges upon transformative actions (rather than adaptive actions) that strengthen health systems so that they can face the dynamic and emergent challenges associated with COVID-19 and other shocks. Based on the barriers and facilitators we identified, we present the lessons we learned and recommend transformations for sustaining virtual care during and beyond the COVID-19 pandemic.
虚拟医疗在历史上面临着广泛采用的障碍。然而,新冠疫情使得虚拟医疗技术得以迅速采用和扩展。尽管新冠疫情的强烈和持久性质重新激发了人们对卫生系统恢复力的兴趣,其中包括服务如何应对冲击进行调整或转变,但关于虚拟医疗技术在卫生系统恢复力中作用的证据却很匮乏。
在加拿大安大略省的多伦多综合医院,心脏护理的快速虚拟化于2020年3月9日开始,作为对疫情的应对措施。本研究的目的是了解人们在疫情导致的心脏护理快速虚拟化和扩展方面的经历、障碍和促进因素。
进行了一项单案例研究,包含3个嵌入式分析单元。从加拿大多伦多一家心脏功能诊所现有的基于手机的移动远程监测项目中有目的地招募患者、临床医生和工作人员。由两名研究人员进行个人半结构化电话访谈,并逐字转录。采用语义层面的归纳主题分析法对转录本进行分析并确定主题。
共访谈了29名参与者,包括患者(n = 16)、临床医生(n = 9)和工作人员(n = 4)。确定了以下五个主题:(1)患者安全作为采用虚拟医疗的催化剂;(2)零散的虚拟医疗解决方案;(3)应对新角色和工作量;(4)虚拟医疗中的缺失环节;(5)不平等悖论。保护患者安全的动机以及采用虚拟医疗的零散方法促进了新冠疫情期间心脏护理的吸收性和适应性恢复力。然而,诊所角色和工作流程的临时改变、通过远程方法建立关系的挑战以及不平等的加剧是威胁虚拟医疗持续发展的障碍。
我们认为,维持虚拟医疗取决于变革性行动(而非适应性行动)以加强卫生系统,使其能够应对与新冠疫情及其他冲击相关的动态和突发挑战。基于我们确定的障碍和促进因素,我们分享所学经验教训,并建议在新冠疫情期间及之后维持虚拟医疗的变革措施。