Integrating acute stroke telemedicine consultations into specialists' usual practice: a qualitative analysis comparing the experience of Australia and the United Kingdom
Stroke telemedicine can reduce healthcare inequities by increasing access to specialists. Successful telemedicine networks require specialists adapting clinical practice to provide remote consultations. Variation in experiences of specialists between different countries is unknown. To support future...
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Published in: | BMC health services research Vol. 17; no. 1; p. 751 |
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Abstract | Stroke telemedicine can reduce healthcare inequities by increasing access to specialists. Successful telemedicine networks require specialists adapting clinical practice to provide remote consultations. Variation in experiences of specialists between different countries is unknown. To support future implementation, we compared perceptions of Australian and United Kingdom specialists providing remote acute stroke consultations.
Specialist participants were identified using purposive sampling from two new services: Australia's Victorian Stroke Telemedicine Program (n = 6; 2010-13) and the United Kingdom's Cumbria and Lancashire telestroke network (n = 5; 2010-2012). Semi-structured interviews were conducted pre- and post-implementation, recorded and transcribed verbatim. Deductive thematic and content analysis (NVivo) was undertaken by two independent coders using Normalisation Process Theory to explore integration of telemedicine into practice. Agreement between coders was M = 91%, SD = 9 and weighted average κ = 0.70.
Cross-cultural similarities and differences were found. In both countries, specialists described old and new consulting practices, the purpose and value of telemedicine systems, and concerns regarding confidence in the assessment and diagnostic skills of unknown colleagues requesting telemedicine support. Australian specialists discussed how remote consultations impacted on usual roles and suggested future improvements, while United Kingdom specialists discussed system governance, policy and procedures.
Australian and United Kingdom specialists reported telemedicine required changes in work practice and development of new skills. Both groups described potential for improvements in stroke telemedicine systems with Australian specialists more focused on role change and the United Kingdom on system governance issues. Future research should examine if cross-cultural variation reflects different models of care and extends to other networks. |
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AbstractList | Stroke telemedicine can reduce healthcare inequities by increasing access to specialists. Successful telemedicine networks require specialists adapting clinical practice to provide remote consultations. Variation in experiences of specialists between different countries is unknown. To support future implementation, we compared perceptions of Australian and United Kingdom specialists providing remote acute stroke consultations.
Specialist participants were identified using purposive sampling from two new services: Australia's Victorian Stroke Telemedicine Program (n = 6; 2010-13) and the United Kingdom's Cumbria and Lancashire telestroke network (n = 5; 2010-2012). Semi-structured interviews were conducted pre- and post-implementation, recorded and transcribed verbatim. Deductive thematic and content analysis (NVivo) was undertaken by two independent coders using Normalisation Process Theory to explore integration of telemedicine into practice. Agreement between coders was M = 91%, SD = 9 and weighted average κ = 0.70.
Cross-cultural similarities and differences were found. In both countries, specialists described old and new consulting practices, the purpose and value of telemedicine systems, and concerns regarding confidence in the assessment and diagnostic skills of unknown colleagues requesting telemedicine support. Australian specialists discussed how remote consultations impacted on usual roles and suggested future improvements, while United Kingdom specialists discussed system governance, policy and procedures.
Australian and United Kingdom specialists reported telemedicine required changes in work practice and development of new skills. Both groups described potential for improvements in stroke telemedicine systems with Australian specialists more focused on role change and the United Kingdom on system governance issues. Future research should examine if cross-cultural variation reflects different models of care and extends to other networks. Abstract Background Stroke telemedicine can reduce healthcare inequities by increasing access to specialists. Successful telemedicine networks require specialists adapting clinical practice to provide remote consultations. Variation in experiences of specialists between different countries is unknown. To support future implementation, we compared perceptions of Australian and United Kingdom specialists providing remote acute stroke consultations. Methods Specialist participants were identified using purposive sampling from two new services: Australia’s Victorian Stroke Telemedicine Program (n = 6; 2010–13) and the United Kingdom’s Cumbria and Lancashire telestroke network (n = 5; 2010–2012). Semi-structured interviews were conducted pre- and post-implementation, recorded and transcribed verbatim. Deductive thematic and content analysis (NVivo) was undertaken by two independent coders using Normalisation Process Theory to explore integration of telemedicine into practice. Agreement between coders was M = 91%, SD = 9 and weighted average κ = 0.70. Results Cross-cultural similarities and differences were found. In both countries, specialists described old and new consulting practices, the purpose and value of telemedicine systems, and concerns regarding confidence in the assessment and diagnostic skills of unknown colleagues requesting telemedicine support. Australian specialists discussed how remote consultations impacted on usual roles and suggested future improvements, while United Kingdom specialists discussed system governance, policy and procedures. Conclusion Australian and United Kingdom specialists reported telemedicine required changes in work practice and development of new skills. Both groups described potential for improvements in stroke telemedicine systems with Australian specialists more focused on role change and the United Kingdom on system governance issues. Future research should examine if cross-cultural variation reflects different models of care and extends to other networks. BACKGROUNDStroke telemedicine can reduce healthcare inequities by increasing access to specialists. Successful telemedicine networks require specialists adapting clinical practice to provide remote consultations. Variation in experiences of specialists between different countries is unknown. To support future implementation, we compared perceptions of Australian and United Kingdom specialists providing remote acute stroke consultations. METHODSSpecialist participants were identified using purposive sampling from two new services: Australia's Victorian Stroke Telemedicine Program (n = 6; 2010-13) and the United Kingdom's Cumbria and Lancashire telestroke network (n = 5; 2010-2012). Semi-structured interviews were conducted pre- and post-implementation, recorded and transcribed verbatim. Deductive thematic and content analysis (NVivo) was undertaken by two independent coders using Normalisation Process Theory to explore integration of telemedicine into practice. Agreement between coders was M = 91%, SD = 9 and weighted average κ = 0.70. RESULTSCross-cultural similarities and differences were found. In both countries, specialists described old and new consulting practices, the purpose and value of telemedicine systems, and concerns regarding confidence in the assessment and diagnostic skills of unknown colleagues requesting telemedicine support. Australian specialists discussed how remote consultations impacted on usual roles and suggested future improvements, while United Kingdom specialists discussed system governance, policy and procedures. CONCLUSIONAustralian and United Kingdom specialists reported telemedicine required changes in work practice and development of new skills. Both groups described potential for improvements in stroke telemedicine systems with Australian specialists more focused on role change and the United Kingdom on system governance issues. Future research should examine if cross-cultural variation reflects different models of care and extends to other networks. Background Stroke telemedicine can reduce healthcare inequities by increasing access to specialists. Successful telemedicine networks require specialists adapting clinical practice to provide remote consultations. Variation in experiences of specialists between different countries is unknown. To support future implementation, we compared perceptions of Australian and United Kingdom specialists providing remote acute stroke consultations. Methods Specialist participants were identified using purposive sampling from two new services: Australia’s Victorian Stroke Telemedicine Program (n = 6; 2010–13) and the United Kingdom’s Cumbria and Lancashire telestroke network (n = 5; 2010–2012). Semi-structured interviews were conducted pre- and post-implementation, recorded and transcribed verbatim. Deductive thematic and content analysis (NVivo) was undertaken by two independent coders using Normalisation Process Theory to explore integration of telemedicine into practice. Agreement between coders was M = 91%, SD = 9 and weighted average κ = 0.70. Results Cross-cultural similarities and differences were found. In both countries, specialists described old and new consulting practices, the purpose and value of telemedicine systems, and concerns regarding confidence in the assessment and diagnostic skills of unknown colleagues requesting telemedicine support. Australian specialists discussed how remote consultations impacted on usual roles and suggested future improvements, while United Kingdom specialists discussed system governance, policy and procedures. Conclusion Australian and United Kingdom specialists reported telemedicine required changes in work practice and development of new skills. Both groups described potential for improvements in stroke telemedicine systems with Australian specialists more focused on role change and the United Kingdom on system governance issues. Future research should examine if cross-cultural variation reflects different models of care and extends to other networks. |
ArticleNumber | 751 |
Author | Cadilhac, Dominique A Price, Christopher I Gibson, Josephine M E Dewey, Helen M Ford, Gary A Bladin, Christopher F May, Carl R Day, Elaine Donnan, Geoffrey A Bagot, Kathleen L Davies, D Paul Vu, Michelle Watkins, Caroline L Lightbody, Catherine E McLoughlin, Alison S R Emsley, Hedley C A |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Kathleen L surname: Bagot fullname: Bagot, Kathleen L email: kathleen.bagot@florey.edu.au, kathleen.bagot@florey.edu.au, kathleen.bagot@florey.edu.au organization: Department of Medicine, School of Clinical Sciences at Monash Health, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia. kathleen.bagot@florey.edu.au – sequence: 2 givenname: Dominique A surname: Cadilhac fullname: Cadilhac, Dominique A organization: Department of Medicine, School of Clinical Sciences at Monash Health, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia – sequence: 3 givenname: Christopher F surname: Bladin fullname: Bladin, Christopher F organization: Department of Medicine, School of Clinical Sciences at Monash Health, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia – sequence: 4 givenname: Caroline L surname: Watkins fullname: Watkins, Caroline L organization: Australian Catholic University, Sydney, Australia – sequence: 5 givenname: Michelle surname: Vu fullname: Vu, Michelle organization: Stroke Division, The Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia – sequence: 6 givenname: Geoffrey A surname: Donnan fullname: Donnan, Geoffrey A organization: Stroke Division, The Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia – sequence: 7 givenname: Helen M surname: Dewey fullname: Dewey, Helen M organization: Eastern Health Clinical School, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia – sequence: 8 givenname: Hedley C A surname: Emsley fullname: Emsley, Hedley C A organization: Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Preston, UK – sequence: 9 givenname: D Paul surname: Davies fullname: Davies, D Paul organization: North Cumbria University Hospitals NHS Trust, Carlisle, UK – sequence: 10 givenname: Elaine surname: Day fullname: Day, Elaine organization: Lancashire and South Cumbria Strategic Clinical Network, Greater Manchester, UK – sequence: 11 givenname: Gary A surname: Ford fullname: Ford, Gary A organization: Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and Division of Medical Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK – sequence: 12 givenname: Christopher I surname: Price fullname: Price, Christopher I organization: Newcastle University, Newcastle, UK – sequence: 13 givenname: Carl R surname: May fullname: May, Carl R organization: University of Southampton, Southampton, UK – sequence: 14 givenname: Alison S R surname: McLoughlin fullname: McLoughlin, Alison S R organization: North Cumbria University Hospitals NHS Trust, Carlisle, UK – sequence: 15 givenname: Josephine M E surname: Gibson fullname: Gibson, Josephine M E organization: University of Central Lancashire, Preston, UK – sequence: 16 givenname: Catherine E surname: Lightbody fullname: Lightbody, Catherine E organization: Australian Catholic University, Sydney, Australia |
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Snippet | Stroke telemedicine can reduce healthcare inequities by increasing access to specialists. Successful telemedicine networks require specialists adapting... Background Stroke telemedicine can reduce healthcare inequities by increasing access to specialists. Successful telemedicine networks require specialists... BACKGROUNDStroke telemedicine can reduce healthcare inequities by increasing access to specialists. Successful telemedicine networks require specialists... Abstract Background Stroke telemedicine can reduce healthcare inequities by increasing access to specialists. Successful telemedicine networks require... |
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SubjectTerms | Acute Adult Barriers Consultants Content analysis Delivery of Health Care - methods Dissent and Disputes Emergency medical care England Ethics Facilitators Female Health services Holidays & special occasions Hospitals Humans Implementation Interviews Male Normalisation process theory Perception Pilot Projects Practice Patterns, Physicians Qualitative research Referral and Consultation Remote Consultation Research ethics Schedules Social Support Specialization Stroke Stroke - diagnosis Stroke - therapy Telemedicine Telemedicine - methods Victoria |
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Title | Integrating acute stroke telemedicine consultations into specialists' usual practice: a qualitative analysis comparing the experience of Australia and the United Kingdom |
URI | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29157233 https://www.proquest.com/docview/2296623355 https://search.proquest.com/docview/1966996186 https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PMC5697163 https://doaj.org/article/cc516f6a337e428d86bf4d0ef06268e8 |
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