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Examining the use of telehealth in community nursing: Identifying the factors affecting frontline staff acceptance and telehealth adoption

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Examining the use of telehealth in community nursing: Identifying the factors affecting frontline staff acceptance and telehealth adoption. / Taylor, Johanna; Coates, Elizabeth; Brewster, Liz et al.
In: Journal of Advanced Nursing, Vol. 71, No. 2, 02.2015, p. 326-337.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Taylor, J, Coates, E, Brewster, L, Mountain, G, Wessels, B & Hawley, MS 2015, 'Examining the use of telehealth in community nursing: Identifying the factors affecting frontline staff acceptance and telehealth adoption', Journal of Advanced Nursing, vol. 71, no. 2, pp. 326-337. https://doi.org/10.1111/jan.12480

APA

Vancouver

Taylor J, Coates E, Brewster L, Mountain G, Wessels B, Hawley MS. Examining the use of telehealth in community nursing: Identifying the factors affecting frontline staff acceptance and telehealth adoption. Journal of Advanced Nursing. 2015 Feb;71(2):326-337. Epub 2014 Jul 29. doi: 10.1111/jan.12480

Author

Taylor, Johanna ; Coates, Elizabeth ; Brewster, Liz et al. / Examining the use of telehealth in community nursing : Identifying the factors affecting frontline staff acceptance and telehealth adoption. In: Journal of Advanced Nursing. 2015 ; Vol. 71, No. 2. pp. 326-337.

Bibtex

@article{d8762580ddb94370aa15afbf19098a1e,
title = "Examining the use of telehealth in community nursing: Identifying the factors affecting frontline staff acceptance and telehealth adoption",
abstract = "Aims: To examine frontline staff acceptance of telehealth and identify barriers to and enablers of successful adoption of remote monitoring for patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease and Chronic Heart Failure. Background: The use of telehealth in the UK has not developed at the pace and scale anticipated by policy. Many existing studies report frontline staff acceptance as a key barrier, however data are limited and there is little evidence of the adoption of telehealth in routine practice. Design: Case studies of four community health services in England that use telehealth to monitor patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease and Chronic Heart Failure. Methods: Thematic analysis of qualitative interviews with 84 nursing and other frontline staff; and 21 managers and key stakeholders; data collected May 2012-June 2013. Findings: Staff attitudes ranged from resistance to enthusiasm, with varied opinions about the motives for investing in telehealth and the potential impact on nursing roles. Having reliable and flexible technology and dedicated resources for telehealth work were identified as essential in helping to overcome early barriers to acceptance, along with appropriate staff training and a partnership approach to implementation. Early successes were also important, encouraging staff to use telehealth and facilitating clinical learning and increased adoption. Conclusions: The mainstreaming of telehealth hinges on clinical 'buy-in'. Where barriers to successful implementation exist, clinicians can lose faith in using technology to perform tasks traditionally delivered in person. Addressing barriers is therefore crucial if clinicians are to adopt telehealth into routine practice.",
keywords = "Community health, Innovation adoption, Long-term conditions, Nursing, Technology, Telehealth",
author = "Johanna Taylor and Elizabeth Coates and Liz Brewster and Gail Mountain and Bridgette Wessels and Hawley, {Mark S.}",
year = "2015",
month = feb,
doi = "10.1111/jan.12480",
language = "English",
volume = "71",
pages = "326--337",
journal = "Journal of Advanced Nursing",
issn = "0309-2402",
publisher = "Blackwell Publishing Ltd",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Examining the use of telehealth in community nursing

T2 - Identifying the factors affecting frontline staff acceptance and telehealth adoption

AU - Taylor, Johanna

AU - Coates, Elizabeth

AU - Brewster, Liz

AU - Mountain, Gail

AU - Wessels, Bridgette

AU - Hawley, Mark S.

PY - 2015/2

Y1 - 2015/2

N2 - Aims: To examine frontline staff acceptance of telehealth and identify barriers to and enablers of successful adoption of remote monitoring for patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease and Chronic Heart Failure. Background: The use of telehealth in the UK has not developed at the pace and scale anticipated by policy. Many existing studies report frontline staff acceptance as a key barrier, however data are limited and there is little evidence of the adoption of telehealth in routine practice. Design: Case studies of four community health services in England that use telehealth to monitor patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease and Chronic Heart Failure. Methods: Thematic analysis of qualitative interviews with 84 nursing and other frontline staff; and 21 managers and key stakeholders; data collected May 2012-June 2013. Findings: Staff attitudes ranged from resistance to enthusiasm, with varied opinions about the motives for investing in telehealth and the potential impact on nursing roles. Having reliable and flexible technology and dedicated resources for telehealth work were identified as essential in helping to overcome early barriers to acceptance, along with appropriate staff training and a partnership approach to implementation. Early successes were also important, encouraging staff to use telehealth and facilitating clinical learning and increased adoption. Conclusions: The mainstreaming of telehealth hinges on clinical 'buy-in'. Where barriers to successful implementation exist, clinicians can lose faith in using technology to perform tasks traditionally delivered in person. Addressing barriers is therefore crucial if clinicians are to adopt telehealth into routine practice.

AB - Aims: To examine frontline staff acceptance of telehealth and identify barriers to and enablers of successful adoption of remote monitoring for patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease and Chronic Heart Failure. Background: The use of telehealth in the UK has not developed at the pace and scale anticipated by policy. Many existing studies report frontline staff acceptance as a key barrier, however data are limited and there is little evidence of the adoption of telehealth in routine practice. Design: Case studies of four community health services in England that use telehealth to monitor patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease and Chronic Heart Failure. Methods: Thematic analysis of qualitative interviews with 84 nursing and other frontline staff; and 21 managers and key stakeholders; data collected May 2012-June 2013. Findings: Staff attitudes ranged from resistance to enthusiasm, with varied opinions about the motives for investing in telehealth and the potential impact on nursing roles. Having reliable and flexible technology and dedicated resources for telehealth work were identified as essential in helping to overcome early barriers to acceptance, along with appropriate staff training and a partnership approach to implementation. Early successes were also important, encouraging staff to use telehealth and facilitating clinical learning and increased adoption. Conclusions: The mainstreaming of telehealth hinges on clinical 'buy-in'. Where barriers to successful implementation exist, clinicians can lose faith in using technology to perform tasks traditionally delivered in person. Addressing barriers is therefore crucial if clinicians are to adopt telehealth into routine practice.

KW - Community health

KW - Innovation adoption

KW - Long-term conditions

KW - Nursing

KW - Technology

KW - Telehealth

U2 - 10.1111/jan.12480

DO - 10.1111/jan.12480

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 25069605

AN - SCOPUS:84921062282

VL - 71

SP - 326

EP - 337

JO - Journal of Advanced Nursing

JF - Journal of Advanced Nursing

SN - 0309-2402

IS - 2

ER -