4.4 Article

The Role of Physicians in Digitalizing Health Care Provision: Web-Based Survey Study

Journal

JMIR MEDICAL INFORMATICS
Volume 9, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

JMIR PUBLICATIONS, INC
DOI: 10.2196/31527

Keywords

digitalization; digital transformation; health care; human factor; physicians; digital natives; web-based survey; digital health

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The study investigated the role of physicians in the digitalization of healthcare provision in Germany, with most physicians showing a positive attitude towards digitalization. The younger generation of physicians had a slightly higher usage of mobile apps, and the benefits of digitalization were seen in data quality and readability. However, there is a gap between willingness to participate and actually having digital sovereignty, indicating a need for education on digitalization in both initial studies and ongoing training processes.
Background: Digitalization affects all areas of society, including the health care sector. However, the digitalization of health care provision is progressing slowly compared to other sectors. In the professional and political literature, physicians are partially portrayed as digitalization sceptics. Thus, the role of physicians in this process requires further investigation. The theory of digital natives suggests a lower hurdle for younger generations to engage with digital technologies. Objective: The objective of this study was to investigate the role of physicians in the process of digitalizing health care provision in Germany and to assess the age factor. Methods: We conducted a large-scale study to assess the role of this professional group in the progress of the digital transformation of the German health care sector. Therefore, in an anonymous online survey, we inquired about the current digital penetration of the personal working environment, expectations, attitude toward, and concerns regarding digitalization. Based on these data, we studied associations with the nominal variable age and variations across 2 age groups. Results: The 1274 participants included in the study generally showed a high affinity towards digitalization with a mean of 3.88 on a 5-point Likert scale; 723 respondents (56.75%) stated they personally use mobile apps in their everyday working life, with a weak tendency to be associated with the respondents' age (eta=0.26). Participants saw the most noticeable existing benefits through digitalization in data quality and readability (882/1274, 69.23%) and the least in patient engagement (213/1274, 16.72%). Medical practitioners preponderantly expect further improvements through increased digitalization across almost all queried areas but the most in access to medical knowledge (1136/1274, 89.17%), treatment of orphan diseases (1016/1274, 79.75%), and medical research (1023/1274, 80.30%). Conclusions: Respondents defined their role in the digitalization of health care provision as ambivalent: scrutinizing on the one hand but active and open on the other. A gap between willingness to participate and digital sovereignty was indicated. Thus, education on digitalization as a means to support health care provision should not only be included in the course of study but also in the continuing process of further and advanced training.

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