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Nursing Workflow Change in a COVID-19 Inpatient Unit Following the Deployment of Inpatient Telehealth: Observational Study Using a Real-Time Locating System.

Stacie VilendrerMary E LoughDonn W GarvertMonique H LambertJonathan Hsijing LuBirju S PatelNigam Haresh ShahMichelle Y WilliamsSamantha M R Kling
Published in: Journal of medical Internet research (2022)
RTLS movement data suggest that total nursing time at the bedside remained unchanged following the deployment of inpatient telehealth in a COVID-19 unit. Compared to other units with shared mobile telehealth units, the frequency of nurse-patient in-person encounters decreased and the duration lengthened on a COVID-19 unit with in-room telehealth availability, indicating "batched" redistribution of work to maintain total time at bedside relative to prepandemic periods. The simultaneous adoption of telehealth suggests that virtual care was a complement to, rather than a replacement for, in-person care. However, study limitations preclude our ability to draw a causal link between nursing workflow change and telehealth adoption. Thus, further evaluation is needed to determine potential downstream implications on disease transmission, PPE utilization, and patient safety.
Keyphrases
  • quality improvement
  • patient safety
  • mental health
  • coronavirus disease
  • palliative care
  • healthcare
  • sars cov
  • electronic health record
  • machine learning
  • case report
  • risk assessment