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Future Mobile Device Usage, Requirements, and Expectations of Physicians in German University Hospitals: Web-Based Survey

BACKGROUND: The use of mobile devices in hospital care constantly increases. However, smartphones and tablets have not yet widely become official working equipment in medical care. Meanwhile, the parallel use of private and official devices in hospitals is common. Medical staff use smartphones and t...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Maassen, Oliver, Fritsch, Sebastian, Gantner, Julia, Deffge, Saskia, Kunze, Julian, Marx, Gernot, Bickenbach, Johannes
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7781804/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33346735
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/23955
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author Maassen, Oliver
Fritsch, Sebastian
Gantner, Julia
Deffge, Saskia
Kunze, Julian
Marx, Gernot
Bickenbach, Johannes
author_facet Maassen, Oliver
Fritsch, Sebastian
Gantner, Julia
Deffge, Saskia
Kunze, Julian
Marx, Gernot
Bickenbach, Johannes
author_sort Maassen, Oliver
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The use of mobile devices in hospital care constantly increases. However, smartphones and tablets have not yet widely become official working equipment in medical care. Meanwhile, the parallel use of private and official devices in hospitals is common. Medical staff use smartphones and tablets in a growing number of ways. This mixture of devices and how they can be used is a challenge to persons in charge of defining strategies and rules for the usage of mobile devices in hospital care. OBJECTIVE: Therefore, we aimed to examine the status quo of physicians’ mobile device usage and concrete requirements and their future expectations of how mobile devices can be used. METHODS: We performed a web-based survey among physicians in 8 German university hospitals from June to October 2019. The online survey was forwarded by hospital management personnel to physicians from all departments involved in patient care at the local sites. RESULTS: A total of 303 physicians from almost all medical fields and work experience levels completed the web-based survey. The majority regarded a tablet (211/303, 69.6%) and a smartphone (177/303, 58.4%) as the ideal devices for their operational area. In practice, physicians are still predominantly using desktop computers during their worktime (mean percentage of worktime spent on a desktop computer: 56.8%; smartphone: 12.8%; tablet: 3.6%). Today, physicians use mobile devices for basic tasks such as oral (171/303, 56.4%) and written (118/303, 38.9%) communication and to look up dosages, diagnoses, and guidelines (194/303, 64.0%). Respondents are also willing to use mobile devices for more advanced applications such as an early warning system (224/303, 73.9%) and mobile electronic health records (211/303, 69.6%). We found a significant association between the technical affinity and the preference of device in medical care (χs2=53.84, P<.001) showing that with increasing self-reported technical affinity, the preference for smartphones and tablets increases compared to desktop computers. CONCLUSIONS: Physicians in German university hospitals have a high technical affinity and positive attitude toward the widespread implementation of mobile devices in clinical care. They are willing to use official mobile devices in clinical practice for basic and advanced mobile health uses. Thus, the reason for the low usage is not a lack of willingness of the potential users. Challenges that hinder the wider adoption of mobile devices might be regulatory, financial and organizational issues, and missing interoperability standards of clinical information systems, but also a shortage of areas of application in which workflows are adapted for (small) mobile devices.
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spelling pubmed-77818042021-01-11 Future Mobile Device Usage, Requirements, and Expectations of Physicians in German University Hospitals: Web-Based Survey Maassen, Oliver Fritsch, Sebastian Gantner, Julia Deffge, Saskia Kunze, Julian Marx, Gernot Bickenbach, Johannes J Med Internet Res Original Paper BACKGROUND: The use of mobile devices in hospital care constantly increases. However, smartphones and tablets have not yet widely become official working equipment in medical care. Meanwhile, the parallel use of private and official devices in hospitals is common. Medical staff use smartphones and tablets in a growing number of ways. This mixture of devices and how they can be used is a challenge to persons in charge of defining strategies and rules for the usage of mobile devices in hospital care. OBJECTIVE: Therefore, we aimed to examine the status quo of physicians’ mobile device usage and concrete requirements and their future expectations of how mobile devices can be used. METHODS: We performed a web-based survey among physicians in 8 German university hospitals from June to October 2019. The online survey was forwarded by hospital management personnel to physicians from all departments involved in patient care at the local sites. RESULTS: A total of 303 physicians from almost all medical fields and work experience levels completed the web-based survey. The majority regarded a tablet (211/303, 69.6%) and a smartphone (177/303, 58.4%) as the ideal devices for their operational area. In practice, physicians are still predominantly using desktop computers during their worktime (mean percentage of worktime spent on a desktop computer: 56.8%; smartphone: 12.8%; tablet: 3.6%). Today, physicians use mobile devices for basic tasks such as oral (171/303, 56.4%) and written (118/303, 38.9%) communication and to look up dosages, diagnoses, and guidelines (194/303, 64.0%). Respondents are also willing to use mobile devices for more advanced applications such as an early warning system (224/303, 73.9%) and mobile electronic health records (211/303, 69.6%). We found a significant association between the technical affinity and the preference of device in medical care (χs2=53.84, P<.001) showing that with increasing self-reported technical affinity, the preference for smartphones and tablets increases compared to desktop computers. CONCLUSIONS: Physicians in German university hospitals have a high technical affinity and positive attitude toward the widespread implementation of mobile devices in clinical care. They are willing to use official mobile devices in clinical practice for basic and advanced mobile health uses. Thus, the reason for the low usage is not a lack of willingness of the potential users. Challenges that hinder the wider adoption of mobile devices might be regulatory, financial and organizational issues, and missing interoperability standards of clinical information systems, but also a shortage of areas of application in which workflows are adapted for (small) mobile devices. JMIR Publications 2020-12-21 /pmc/articles/PMC7781804/ /pubmed/33346735 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/23955 Text en ©Oliver Maassen, Sebastian Fritsch, Julia Gantner, Saskia Deffge, Julian Kunze, Gernot Marx, Johannes Bickenbach. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 21.12.2020. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://www.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Maassen, Oliver
Fritsch, Sebastian
Gantner, Julia
Deffge, Saskia
Kunze, Julian
Marx, Gernot
Bickenbach, Johannes
Future Mobile Device Usage, Requirements, and Expectations of Physicians in German University Hospitals: Web-Based Survey
title Future Mobile Device Usage, Requirements, and Expectations of Physicians in German University Hospitals: Web-Based Survey
title_full Future Mobile Device Usage, Requirements, and Expectations of Physicians in German University Hospitals: Web-Based Survey
title_fullStr Future Mobile Device Usage, Requirements, and Expectations of Physicians in German University Hospitals: Web-Based Survey
title_full_unstemmed Future Mobile Device Usage, Requirements, and Expectations of Physicians in German University Hospitals: Web-Based Survey
title_short Future Mobile Device Usage, Requirements, and Expectations of Physicians in German University Hospitals: Web-Based Survey
title_sort future mobile device usage, requirements, and expectations of physicians in german university hospitals: web-based survey
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7781804/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33346735
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/23955
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