1 / 17

Effects of Telehealth on the Self Management of Heart Failure

Effects of Telehealth on the Self Management of Heart Failure. Brendon Colaco, M.B.B.S., M.H.A Kathryn H. Dansky, PhD, RN Kathryn H. Bowles, PhD, RN . Introduction. Study to look at the effects of telehealth on home health patients with congestive heart failure

adara
Download Presentation

Effects of Telehealth on the Self Management of Heart Failure

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Effects of Telehealth on the Self Management of Heart Failure Brendon Colaco, M.B.B.S., M.H.A Kathryn H. Dansky, PhD, RN Kathryn H. Bowles, PhD, RN

  2. Introduction • Study to look at the effects of telehealth on home health patients with congestive heart failure • Funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation through its Health E-Technologies Initiative • Study undertaken by researchers at Penn State in collaboration with the Pennsylvania Home Care Association and 10 home health agencies across the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania

  3. Telehealth • Use of telecommunication technology to transmit health information over a telephone line • Can transmit different types of health information such as blood pressure, pulse oximetry, blood glucose levels, heart sounds, breath sounds and in some cases a direct visualization through a camera

  4. Types of telehealth • Asynchronous/ Monitor type: Transmits clinical data only. The data are collected by the machine and transmitted to a central station once a day • Synchronous/ Video type: Transmits live data and video through a camera. The transmission occurs during the live event

  5. Importance of study • Shift from institution centered care to patient centered care • Patient involvement /participation and empowerment • Preventative as opposed to therapeutic care • Era of chronic conditions-need for newer modalities of disease management • Healthcare costs and limitations of resources –capitol and human resources

  6. Aims of study To investigate the relationship between telehealth and patient knowledge and behaviors specifically: • knowledge of heart failure (diet, exercise and medications) • likelihood to adopt suggestions for healthy behavior • specific behaviors regarding symptom management, physical activity and diet

  7. Study Design • Randomized double blinded case control study • Sample • Congestive Heart Failure patients • enrolled in home health care • patient/caregiver is cognitively intact • speaks English • phone line in home

  8. Intervention • Three groups • Control group: regular home health care • Monitor group: receives monitor type telehealth system + regular home health care • Video Group: receives video type telehealth system + regular home health care Episode of home health care-60 days

  9. Survey Instruments • Self Care Heart Failure Index • measures specific behaviors of patients (diet, weight & activity) • measures the likelihood of patients to perform healthy behaviors Responses scored on Likert scale by research assistants blinded to intervention

  10. Survey Instruments • Omaha Problem Rating Scale (PRSO) • measures patients’ knowledge of diet, activity, and medications All responses scored on a Likert scale by research assistants blinded to intervention Patients interviewed at baseline, 60 days and 120 days from admission to study either on the phone or via mail.

  11. Descriptive Statistics • Sample: 212 patients • 81 (38.2%) males • 131 (61.8%) females • Mean age: 77 years ( 44-96) • Mean severity level for CHF:2.63 (1-4) • Control Group: 85 patients • Monitor Group : 90 patients • Video Group: 37 patients

  12. Analyses • Univariate Analyses to determine that the groups were equal at baseline • Reliability analyses for various summary scores • Repeated measures analyses or variance to determine the between subjects and within subjects effects over time

  13. Findings & Limitations • Patients in both telehealth groups showed greater improvement over time on knowledge scores, likelihood to perform healthy behaviors and specific behaviors than the control group • The time factor definitely had a significant effect • There was significant change within the groups; however, the difference between the groups was not statistically significant

  14. Limitations and Challenges • Findings interpreted in light of small sample size due to high attrition. Also sample not complete, therefore these are preliminary findings • Difficulty in enrolling patients and getting three sets of data over 4 month period

  15. Implications & Future Direction • Telehealth an effective intervention through knowledge and behavior? • Is one type of system better than the other, does it vary with patient characteristics? • Policy Implications: adopt telehealth as standard of care? • Reimbursement issues: Medicare reimbursement for telehealth, insurance payers • Need for a cost analyses and effect of telehealth on healthcare resources (nurse hours, hospitalizations, ER visits) • Match telehealth with patient personalities and locus of control to get better results

More Related