telemonitoring of older people

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Telemonitoring of older people Roger Watson www.slideshare.net/RogerWatsonPhDRNFAAN

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Page 1: Telemonitoring of older people

Telemonitoring of older people

Roger Watsonwww.slideshare.net/RogerWatsonPhDRNFAAN

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Telemonitoring: the idea is not new

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Terminology

• Telehealth• Telemedicine• Telemonitoring• Teleconsultation• Telenursing• Telepharmacy• Telephysiotherapy

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Telehealth

Telehealth is a collection of means or methods for enhancing health care, public health, and health education delivery and support using telecommunications technologies.

Telehealth encompasses a broad variety of technologies and tactics to deliver virtual medical, health, and education services.

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Telehealth

Telehealth is a collection of means or methods for enhancing health care, public health, and health education delivery and support using telecommunications technologies.

Telehealth encompasses a broad variety of technologies and tactics to deliver virtual medical, health, and education services.

- telephone

- videoconference

- internet

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Telemedicine

Telemedicine is the direct provision of clinical care, including diagnosing, treating, or consultation, via telecommunications for a patient at a distance.

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Telemonitoring

Telemonitoring is the ongoing assessment of a condition—in particular cardiac arrhythmias and/or other objectively measurable indicators of disease (e.g., heart failure)—by sensors attached to the patient, signals from which are ported wirelessly to a central station or “node” where abnormalities will trigger a response by healthcare workers

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Telemonitoring

Telemonitoring is the ongoing assessment of a condition—in particular cardiac arrhythmias and/or other objectively measurable indicators of disease (e.g., heart failure)—by sensors attached to the patient, signals from which are ported wirelessly to a central station or “node” where abnormalities will trigger a response by healthcare workers

- this implies a one-way process

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Telemonitoring

Telemonitoring is the ongoing assessment of a condition—in particular cardiac arrhythmias and/or other objectively measurable indicators of disease (e.g., heart failure)—by sensors attached to the patient, signals from which are ported wirelessly to a central station or “node” where abnormalities will trigger a response by healthcare workers

- this implies a one-way process

- but it cannot work without a response!

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Telehealth

Relationship between telehealth, telemedicine & telemonitoring

TelemedicineTelemonitoring

Teleconsultation

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Teleconsultation

Teleconsultation is a general term for any consultation between doctors or between doctors and patients on a network or video link.

- The response to telemonitoring can be a teleconsultation

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Why use telemonitoring?

• The technology exists

• Economies of scale

• Convenience (staff/patients)

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When would you use telemonitoring?

• Remote geographical areas

• For people who may have problems attending clinics– Older people– Prisoners– Military

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What are the potential problems?

• Lack of technology

• Technophobia

• Suspicion about surveillance

• Fragility of links (eg Skype/Facetime)

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What can be telemonitored?

• Vital signs

• Mobility

• Location

• Falls

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Pressure sensor

Movement sensor

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Nursing Presence

Research at Hull (Dr David Barrett)

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Approaches to teleconsultation (1)

Nurse-Patient teleconsultation: The nurse is remote from the patient and interacts via video. The patient is often accompanied by a third party – in this case, a family member.

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Approaches to teleconsultation (2)

Nurse/Patient-Practitioner teleconsultation: The nurse is proximal to the patient. The nurse and patient interact with a remote practitioner – in this case, a doctor– via video.

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Types of nursing presence• Operational presence: The nurse’s role in ensuring

the provision of healthcare services or meeting statutory organisational targets.

• Clinical presence: The delivery of specific healthcare functions or tasks.

• Therapeutic presence: Nursing activities that support the patient and/or carer, but are peripheral to the specific object and function of the task

• Social presence: Supporting the sense that the patient has someone ‘there’ with them. In addition, this relates to social elements of the interaction with no direct clinical or therapeutic purpose.

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Nursing PresenceOperational

PresenceSocial

Presence

Therapeutic presence

Clinical Presence

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Adaptations made to enhance the degree of presence

Factors that are most likely to impact on the degree of presence

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Enablers that support adoption• Mainly focused on ‘value-add’ compared with the

telephone;– Increased richness of communication – “you

feel properly involved”– Ability to use two-way non-verbal

communication – “you do pick up on the non-verbal cues”

– Ability to carry out visual assessment of patient and environment -“...we can see whether they are caring for themselves”

• Recognition of user, carer and organisational benefit – “we are able to offer a lot more clinic appointments”

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Constraints associated with teleconsultation• Technophobia -“I’m not very IT literate, so it has been a

steep learning curve for me”

• Technical difficulties – “the smallest problems are enough to act as really powerful barriers”

• Lack of physical proximity – “there is nothing to replace a cuddle. You know, a reassuring hand around the back.”

• Additional workload – “...it does take longer to do...”

• Clinical pathways, processes and environment not designed to incorporate TC – “...one of the problems has been actually finding a place to do it”

• Role anxiety - “…some really don’t like to do it. They would much rather be out there ‘hands on’ with the patient…”

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Compensatory mechanisms• The third party: “but you can get someone over there to

press on it [a burn]…you can get the camera to focus in and say ‘right, press on that bit there, press on that bit here’.”

• Workforce development: “Before we even started, we had to make sure that all the staff had been given training on the actual use of equipment.”

• Temporal compensation: “I can keep going back and looking at a patient every half hour, which, out in the community, there’d be no chance I could do that at all.”

• Exclusion from teleconsultation: – “You would never see a new patient, a completely new

patient [via teleconsultation].” – “I would be shocked if anyone was given bad news via

something like that [teleconsultation].”

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Evidence for telemonitoring

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05/01/2023

© The University of Sheffield / Department of Marketing and Communications

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Structured telephone support or non‐invasive telemonitoring for patients with heart failure

Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews31 OCT 2015 DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD007228.pub3http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD007228.pub3/full#CD007228-fig-00102

All cause mortality

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Structured telephone support or non‐invasive telemonitoring for patients with heart failure

Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews31 OCT 2015 DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD007228.pub3http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD007228.pub3/full#CD007228-fig-00310

Re-hospitalisation

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Conclusion

• Telemonitoring is widely used

• Telemonitoring has several applications including with older people

• There are advantages to telemonitoring

• There are disadvantages to telemonitoring

• A research base around nursing practice in relation to telemonitoring is beginning to grow

• There is evidence for efficacy of telemonitoring

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[email protected]

0000-0001-8040-7625

@rwatson1955