Safety in Teletriage by Nurses and Physicians in the United States and Israel: Narrative Review and Qualitative Study.
Motti HaimiSheila Quilter WheelerPublished in: JMIR human factors (2024)
Remote encounters about acute, worrisome symptoms are time sensitive, requiring decision-making under conditions of uncertainty and urgency. Patient safety and safe professional practice are extremely important in the field of teletriage, which has a high potential for error. This underregulated subspecialty lacks adequate development and substantive research on system safety. Research may commingle terminology and widely different, ill-defined groups of decision makers with wide variation in decision-making skills, clinical training, experience, and job qualifications, thereby confounding results. The rapid pace of telehealth's technological growth creates urgency in identifying safe systems to guide developers and clinicians about needed improvements.
Keyphrases
- decision making
- patient safety
- quality improvement
- primary care
- healthcare
- liver failure
- urinary incontinence
- mental health
- palliative care
- social support
- intensive care unit
- drug induced
- human health
- aortic dissection
- virtual reality
- quantum dots
- medical students
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- sensitive detection