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Internet videoconferencing for patient-clinician consultations in long-term conditions: a review of reviews and applications in line with guidelines and recommendations

Internet videoconferencing for patient-clinician consultations in long-term conditions: a review of reviews and applications in line with guidelines and recommendations
Internet videoconferencing for patient-clinician consultations in long-term conditions: a review of reviews and applications in line with guidelines and recommendations
Background: the use of internet videoconferencing in healthcare settings is widespread, reflecting the normalisation of this mode of communication in society and current healthcare policy. As the use of internet videoconferencing is growing, increasing numbers of reviews of literature are published.

Methods: the authors conducted a review of the existing reviews of literature relating to the use of internet videoconferencing for consultations between healthcare professionals and patients with long-term conditions in their own home. The review was followed with an assessment of UK National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence guidelines for patient care in the context of common long-term illnesses to examine where videoconferencing could be implemented in line with these recommendations.

Results: the review of reviews found no formal evidence in favour of or against the use of internet videoconferencing. Patients were satisfied with the use of videoconferencing but there was limited evidence that it led to a change in health outcomes. Evidence of healthcare professional satisfaction when using this mode of communication with patients was limited. The review of guidelines suggested a number of opportunities for adoption and expansion of internet videoconferencing. Implementing videoconferencing in line with current evidence for patient care could offer support and provide information on using a communication channel that suits individual patient needs and circumstances. The evidence base for videoconferencing is growing, but there is still a lack of data relating to cost, ethics and safety.

Conclusions: while current evidence base for the internet videoconferencing is equivocal, it is likely to change as more research is undertaken and evidence published. With more videoconferencing services added in more contexts, research needs to explore how internet videoconferencing can be implemented in ways that it is valued by patients and clinicians, and how it can fit within organizational and technical infrastructure of the healthcare services.
2055-2076
Ignatowicz, Agnieszka
10742e44-ebb2-424f-820e-739d85f92279
Atherton, Helen
9bb8932e-7bb7-4781-ab97-114613de99b1
Bernstein, Celia J.
5ade1fb4-a712-45af-862a-37cce7f4dc34
Bryce, Carol
9df60565-94a0-4a12-bb77-20c73c2eaf4c
Sturt, Jackie
f729ee1d-6b17-4a7e-a959-fe0d5465795a
Griffiths, Frances
1bb8e612-abbb-4b98-8dc8-83558033d886
Ignatowicz, Agnieszka
10742e44-ebb2-424f-820e-739d85f92279
Atherton, Helen
9bb8932e-7bb7-4781-ab97-114613de99b1
Bernstein, Celia J.
5ade1fb4-a712-45af-862a-37cce7f4dc34
Bryce, Carol
9df60565-94a0-4a12-bb77-20c73c2eaf4c
Sturt, Jackie
f729ee1d-6b17-4a7e-a959-fe0d5465795a
Griffiths, Frances
1bb8e612-abbb-4b98-8dc8-83558033d886

Ignatowicz, Agnieszka, Atherton, Helen, Bernstein, Celia J., Bryce, Carol, Sturt, Jackie and Griffiths, Frances (2019) Internet videoconferencing for patient-clinician consultations in long-term conditions: a review of reviews and applications in line with guidelines and recommendations. Digital Health, 5. (doi:10.1177/2055207619845831).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: the use of internet videoconferencing in healthcare settings is widespread, reflecting the normalisation of this mode of communication in society and current healthcare policy. As the use of internet videoconferencing is growing, increasing numbers of reviews of literature are published.

Methods: the authors conducted a review of the existing reviews of literature relating to the use of internet videoconferencing for consultations between healthcare professionals and patients with long-term conditions in their own home. The review was followed with an assessment of UK National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence guidelines for patient care in the context of common long-term illnesses to examine where videoconferencing could be implemented in line with these recommendations.

Results: the review of reviews found no formal evidence in favour of or against the use of internet videoconferencing. Patients were satisfied with the use of videoconferencing but there was limited evidence that it led to a change in health outcomes. Evidence of healthcare professional satisfaction when using this mode of communication with patients was limited. The review of guidelines suggested a number of opportunities for adoption and expansion of internet videoconferencing. Implementing videoconferencing in line with current evidence for patient care could offer support and provide information on using a communication channel that suits individual patient needs and circumstances. The evidence base for videoconferencing is growing, but there is still a lack of data relating to cost, ethics and safety.

Conclusions: while current evidence base for the internet videoconferencing is equivocal, it is likely to change as more research is undertaken and evidence published. With more videoconferencing services added in more contexts, research needs to explore how internet videoconferencing can be implemented in ways that it is valued by patients and clinicians, and how it can fit within organizational and technical infrastructure of the healthcare services.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 28 March 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 23 April 2019

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 486534
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/486534
ISSN: 2055-2076
PURE UUID: f29033e0-e4de-40a4-b221-3b52d923dac7
ORCID for Helen Atherton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7072-1925

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Date deposited: 25 Jan 2024 17:35
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:18

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Contributors

Author: Agnieszka Ignatowicz
Author: Helen Atherton ORCID iD
Author: Celia J. Bernstein
Author: Carol Bryce
Author: Jackie Sturt
Author: Frances Griffiths

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