Opportunities and Barriers of Telemedicine in Rheumatology: A Participatory, Mixed-Methods Study

  • Felix Muehlensiepen
  • Johannes Knitza
  • Wenke Marquardt
  • Susann May
  • Martin Krusche
  • Axel Hueber
  • Julian Schwarz
  • Nicolas Vuillerme
  • Martin Heinze
  • Martin Welcker

Beteiligte Einrichtungen

Abstract

Despite all its promises, telemedicine is still not widely implemented in the care of rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases (RMDs). The aim of this study is to investigate opportunities, barriers, acceptance, and preferences concerning telemedicine among RMD patients and professional stakeholders. From November 2017 to December 2019, a participatory, mixed-methods study was conducted, consisting of (1) expert interviews (n = 27) with RMD patients and professional stakeholders, (2) a national paper-based patient survey (n = 766), and (3) focus groups (n = 2) with patient representatives and rheumatologists. The qualitative findings indicate that patients equate personal contact with physical face-to-face contact, which could be reduced by implementing telemedicine, thus negatively influencing the patient-doctor relationship. Correspondingly "no personal contact with the doctor" is the main reason (64%) why 38% of the surveyed patients refuse to try telemedicine. Professional stakeholders expect telemedicine to contribute to the effective allocation of scarce resources in rheumatology care. The main barriers reported by stakeholders were the scarcity of time resources in RMD care, the absence of physical examinations, and organizational challenges associated with the implementation of telemedicine in RMD care. While the exact integration of telemedicine into routine care has yet to be found, the consequences on the patient-physician relationship must be permanently considered.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummer13127
ISSN1661-7827
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 13.12.2021
PubMed 34948737