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Telemedicine’s Potential to Support Good Dying in Nigeria: A Qualitative Study

OBJECTIVES: This qualitative study explores Nigerian health care professionals’ concepts of good dying/a good death and how telemedicine technologies and services would fit the current Nigerian palliative care practice. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Supported by the Centre for Palliative Care Nigeria (CPCN...

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Autores principales: van Gurp, Jelle, Soyannwo, Olaitan, Odebunmi, Kehinde, Dania, Simpa, van Selm, Martine, van Leeuwen, Evert, Vissers, Kris, Hasselaar, Jeroen
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4452265/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26030154
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0126820
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author van Gurp, Jelle
Soyannwo, Olaitan
Odebunmi, Kehinde
Dania, Simpa
van Selm, Martine
van Leeuwen, Evert
Vissers, Kris
Hasselaar, Jeroen
author_facet van Gurp, Jelle
Soyannwo, Olaitan
Odebunmi, Kehinde
Dania, Simpa
van Selm, Martine
van Leeuwen, Evert
Vissers, Kris
Hasselaar, Jeroen
author_sort van Gurp, Jelle
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: This qualitative study explores Nigerian health care professionals’ concepts of good dying/a good death and how telemedicine technologies and services would fit the current Nigerian palliative care practice. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Supported by the Centre for Palliative Care Nigeria (CPCN) and the University College Hospital (UCH) in Ibadan, Nigeria, the authors organized three focus groups with Nigerian health care professionals interested in palliative care, unstructured interviews with key role players for palliative care and representatives of telecom companies, and field visits to primary, secondary and tertiary healthcare clinics that provided palliative care. Data analysis consisted of open coding, constant comparison, diagramming of categorizations and relations, and extensive member checks. RESULTS: The focus group participants classified good dying into 2 domains: a feeling of completion of the individual life and dying within the community. Reported barriers to palliative care provision were socio-economic consequences of being seriously ill, taboos on dying and being ill, restricted access to adequate medical–technical care, equation of religion with medicine, and the faulty implementation of palliative care policy by government. The addition of telemedicine to Nigeria’s palliative care practice appears problematic, due to irregular bandwidth, poor network coverage, and unstable power supply obstructing interactivity and access to information. However, a tele-education ‘lite’ scenario seemed viable in Nigeria, wherein low-tech educational networks are central that build on non-synchronous online communication. DISCUSSION: Nigerian health care professionals’ concepts on good dying/a good death and barriers and opportunities for palliative care provision were, for the greater part, similar to prior findings from other studies in Africa. Information for and education of patient, family, and community are essential to further improve palliative care in Africa. Telemedicine can only help if low-tech solutions are applied that work around network coverage problems by focusing on non-synchronous online communication.
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spelling pubmed-44522652015-06-09 Telemedicine’s Potential to Support Good Dying in Nigeria: A Qualitative Study van Gurp, Jelle Soyannwo, Olaitan Odebunmi, Kehinde Dania, Simpa van Selm, Martine van Leeuwen, Evert Vissers, Kris Hasselaar, Jeroen PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVES: This qualitative study explores Nigerian health care professionals’ concepts of good dying/a good death and how telemedicine technologies and services would fit the current Nigerian palliative care practice. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Supported by the Centre for Palliative Care Nigeria (CPCN) and the University College Hospital (UCH) in Ibadan, Nigeria, the authors organized three focus groups with Nigerian health care professionals interested in palliative care, unstructured interviews with key role players for palliative care and representatives of telecom companies, and field visits to primary, secondary and tertiary healthcare clinics that provided palliative care. Data analysis consisted of open coding, constant comparison, diagramming of categorizations and relations, and extensive member checks. RESULTS: The focus group participants classified good dying into 2 domains: a feeling of completion of the individual life and dying within the community. Reported barriers to palliative care provision were socio-economic consequences of being seriously ill, taboos on dying and being ill, restricted access to adequate medical–technical care, equation of religion with medicine, and the faulty implementation of palliative care policy by government. The addition of telemedicine to Nigeria’s palliative care practice appears problematic, due to irregular bandwidth, poor network coverage, and unstable power supply obstructing interactivity and access to information. However, a tele-education ‘lite’ scenario seemed viable in Nigeria, wherein low-tech educational networks are central that build on non-synchronous online communication. DISCUSSION: Nigerian health care professionals’ concepts on good dying/a good death and barriers and opportunities for palliative care provision were, for the greater part, similar to prior findings from other studies in Africa. Information for and education of patient, family, and community are essential to further improve palliative care in Africa. Telemedicine can only help if low-tech solutions are applied that work around network coverage problems by focusing on non-synchronous online communication. Public Library of Science 2015-06-01 /pmc/articles/PMC4452265/ /pubmed/26030154 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0126820 Text en © 2015 van Gurp et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
van Gurp, Jelle
Soyannwo, Olaitan
Odebunmi, Kehinde
Dania, Simpa
van Selm, Martine
van Leeuwen, Evert
Vissers, Kris
Hasselaar, Jeroen
Telemedicine’s Potential to Support Good Dying in Nigeria: A Qualitative Study
title Telemedicine’s Potential to Support Good Dying in Nigeria: A Qualitative Study
title_full Telemedicine’s Potential to Support Good Dying in Nigeria: A Qualitative Study
title_fullStr Telemedicine’s Potential to Support Good Dying in Nigeria: A Qualitative Study
title_full_unstemmed Telemedicine’s Potential to Support Good Dying in Nigeria: A Qualitative Study
title_short Telemedicine’s Potential to Support Good Dying in Nigeria: A Qualitative Study
title_sort telemedicine’s potential to support good dying in nigeria: a qualitative study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4452265/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26030154
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0126820
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