BMC Health Services Research | |
Joining telehealth in rheumatology: a survey on the role played by personalized experience from patients’ perspective | |
Research | |
Elisabetta Listorti1  Lucia Ferrara1  Valeria D. Tozzi1  Nicola Ughi2  Oscar M. Epis2  Antonella Adinolfi2  Maria Chiara Gerardi2  | |
[1] CERGAS SDA Bocconi, Bocconi University, Milan, Italy;Rheumatology Unit, ASST Grande Ospedale Metropolitano Niguarda, Milan, Italy; | |
关键词: Telehealth; Patients; Survey; Rheumatology; Digital health; e-health; | |
DOI : 10.1186/s12913-023-09575-5 | |
received in 2022-10-25, accepted in 2023-05-18, 发布年份 2023 | |
来源: Springer | |
【 摘 要 】
BackgroundThe beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic has forced many hospital departments worldwide to implement telehealth strategies for the first time. Telehealth represents the opportunity to increase value for all stakeholders, including patients and healthcare staff, but its success constitutes a challenge for all of them and particularly patients play a crucial role for their needed adherence. This study focuses on the experience of the Rheumatology Unit of Niguarda Hospital in Milan (Italy), where telehealth projects have been implemented for more than a decade with structured design and organized processes. The case study is paradigmatic because patients have experimented personalized mixes of telehealth channels, including e-mails and phone calls, Patient Reported Outcomes questionnaires, and home delivery of drugs. Given all these peculiarities, we decided to deepen patients’ perspective through three main aspects related to the adoption of telehealth: (i) the benefits perceived, (ii) the willingness to enrol in future projects, (iii) the preference on the service-mix between remote contacts and in-person visits. Most importantly, we investigated differences in the three areas among all patients based on the mix of telehealth channels experienced.MethodsWe conducted a survey from November 2021 to January 2022, enrolling consecutively patients attending the Rheumatology Unit of Niguarda Hospital in Milan (Italy). Our survey comprised an introductory set of questions related to personal, social, clinical and ICT skills information, followed by the central part on telehealth. All the answers were analysed with descriptive statistics and regression models.ResultsA complete response was given by 400 patients: 283 (71%) were female, 237 (59%) were 40–64 years old, 213 (53%) of them declared to work, and the disease most represented was Rheumatoid Arthritis (144 patients, 36%). Descriptive statistics and regression results revealed that (i) non-users imagined wide-ranging benefits compared to users; (ii) other things being equal, having had a more intense experience of telehealth increased the odds of accepting to participate to future projects by 3.1 times (95% C.I. 1.04–9.25), compared to non-users; (iii) the more telehealth was experienced, the higher the willingness to substitute in-person with online contacts.ConclusionsOur study contributes to enlighten the crucial role played by the telehealth experience in determining patients’ preferences.
【 授权许可】
CC BY
© The Author(s) 2023
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
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RO202309077200005ZK.pdf | 970KB | download | |
Fig. 9 | 87KB | Image | download |
Fig. 16 | 93KB | Image | download |
40517_2023_252_Article_IEq30.gif | 1KB | Image | download |
【 图 表 】
40517_2023_252_Article_IEq30.gif
Fig. 16
Fig. 9
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