4.7 Article

Usage and perceptions of telemedicine among health care professionals in China

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2022.104856

Keywords

Telemedicine; Health care professionals; Utilization; Perceptions; Attitude

Funding

  1. National Super-computing Zhengzhou Center Innovation Ecosystem Construction Technology Project [201400210400]
  2. Scientific and Technological Project of Henan Province Key R & D and Promotion [222102310178]
  3. Joint Construction Project of the Henan Province Medical Science and Technology Research Plan [LHGJ20200331]
  4. Innovation Research Team of Higher Education in Henan Province [20IRTSTHN028]

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Chinese healthcare professionals have a fairly positive perception and usage of telemedicine, although the usage rate is relatively low. They believe that telemedicine can reduce patient referrals and are satisfied with it, willing to continue using and recommending it to patients. Issues such as incomplete equipment, lack of timeliness, high costs, inability to reimburse medical insurance, non-standardized medical records, inadequate publicity, cumbersome processes, and long waiting time are identified.
Objective: To explore health care professionals' usage and perceptions of telemedicine, including their experience, evaluation and attitude towards telemedicine, and the factors affecting their satisfaction, using intention, and willingness to recommend telemedicine. Methods: A nationwide and web-based survey was conducted. Statistical charts were used to describe the usage and perceptions of telemedicine by health care professionals. And the ordinal logistic regression was applied to analyze the influencing factors. Results: A total of 1349 valid questionnaires were collected. In the survey, 74.0 % of Chinese health care pro-fessionals used telemedicine once a week. The average duration of participating in telemedicine services lasted mainly 11 - 30 min (64.0 %). More than half (52.5 %) of participants & rsquo; hospitals adopted fee subsidy measures, followed by the award for excellent evaluation (36.4 %). The majority (92.5 %) believed that telemedicine could reduce patient referral rates. More than 95 % were satisfied with telemedicine, were willing to continue, and would recommend telemedicine for patients, respectively. The main problems existing were: incomplete system equipment, insufficient timeliness, high costs, inability to reimburse medical insurance, non-standardized medical records, inadequate publicity, cumbersome processes and long waiting time. Ordinal logistic regres-sion showed that too short service duration (<= 10 min) could significantly reduce medical professionals' overall satisfaction, using intention and willingness to recommend (P = 0.026, P = 0.017 and P = 0.040 respectively), while the convenience of the operating system had a significant positive impact (P = 0.005, P = 0.003 and P = 0.001 respectively). And cost subsidy incentive and the promotion of professional titles could significantly enhance their overall satisfaction(P = 0.006, P = 0.030), using intention (P = 0.011, P = 0.001), and willingness to recommend (P = 0.040, P = 0.004). Conclusions: The usage of telemedicine is relatively insufficient. Most health care professionals have fairly positive opinions toward telemedicine. The most mentioned issues and expectations for telemedicine can be roughly divided into four categories: infrastructure, service process, charge and cost, and popularity. It is possible to improve their evaluation by improving system convenience, enhancing service punctuality, avoiding excessively short service duration and adopting incentive measures.

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