Cargando…

A Mobile App to Facilitate Socially Distanced Hospital Communication During COVID-19: Implementation Experience

BACKGROUND: COVID-19 has significantly altered health care delivery, requiring clinicians and hospitals to adapt to rapidly changing hospital policies and social distancing guidelines. At our large academic medical center, clinicians reported that existing information on distribution channels, inclu...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Anyanwu, Emeka C, Ward, R Parker, Shah, Atman, Arora, Vineet, Umscheid, Craig A
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7903979/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33513562
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/24452
_version_ 1783654839802134528
author Anyanwu, Emeka C
Ward, R Parker
Shah, Atman
Arora, Vineet
Umscheid, Craig A
author_facet Anyanwu, Emeka C
Ward, R Parker
Shah, Atman
Arora, Vineet
Umscheid, Craig A
author_sort Anyanwu, Emeka C
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: COVID-19 has significantly altered health care delivery, requiring clinicians and hospitals to adapt to rapidly changing hospital policies and social distancing guidelines. At our large academic medical center, clinicians reported that existing information on distribution channels, including emails and hospital intranet posts, was inadequate to keep everyone abreast with these changes. To address these challenges, we adapted a mobile app developed in-house to communicate critical changes in hospital policies and enable direct telephonic communication between clinical team members and hospitalized patients, to support social distancing guidelines and remote rounding. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to describe the unique benefits and challenges of adapting an app developed in-house to facilitate communication and remote rounding during COVID-19. METHODS: We adapted moblMD, a mobile app available on the iOS and Android platforms. In conjunction with our Hospital Incident Command System, resident advisory council, and health system innovation center, we identified critical, time-sensitive policies for app usage. A shared collaborative document was used to align app-based communication with more traditional communication channels. To minimize synchronization efforts, we particularly focused on high-yield policies, and the time of last review and the corresponding reviewer were noted for each protocol. To facilitate social distancing and remote patient rounding, the app was also populated with a searchable directory of numbers to patient bedside phones and hospital locations. We monitored anonymized user activity from February 1 to July 31, 2020. RESULTS: On its first release, 1104 clinicians downloaded moblMD during the observation period, of which 46% (n=508) of downloads occurred within 72 hours of initial release. COVID-19 policies in the app were reviewed most commonly during the first week (801 views). Users made sustained use of hospital phone dialing features, including weekly peaks of 2242 phone number dials, 1874 directory searches, and 277 patient room phone number searches through the last 2 weeks of the observation period. Furthermore, clinicians submitted 56 content- and phone number–related suggestions through moblMD. CONCLUSIONS: We rapidly developed and deployed a communication-focused mobile app early during COVID-19, which has demonstrated initial and sustained value among clinicians in communicating with in-patients and each other during social distancing. Our internal innovation benefited from our team’s familiarity with institutional structures, short feedback loops, limited security and privacy implications, and a path toward sustainability provided by our innovation center. Challenges in content management were overcome through synchronization efforts and timestamping review. As COVID-19 continues to alter health care delivery, user activity metrics suggest that our solution will remain important in our efforts to continue providing safe and up-to-date clinical care.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7903979
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher JMIR Publications
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-79039792021-03-02 A Mobile App to Facilitate Socially Distanced Hospital Communication During COVID-19: Implementation Experience Anyanwu, Emeka C Ward, R Parker Shah, Atman Arora, Vineet Umscheid, Craig A JMIR Mhealth Uhealth Short Paper BACKGROUND: COVID-19 has significantly altered health care delivery, requiring clinicians and hospitals to adapt to rapidly changing hospital policies and social distancing guidelines. At our large academic medical center, clinicians reported that existing information on distribution channels, including emails and hospital intranet posts, was inadequate to keep everyone abreast with these changes. To address these challenges, we adapted a mobile app developed in-house to communicate critical changes in hospital policies and enable direct telephonic communication between clinical team members and hospitalized patients, to support social distancing guidelines and remote rounding. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to describe the unique benefits and challenges of adapting an app developed in-house to facilitate communication and remote rounding during COVID-19. METHODS: We adapted moblMD, a mobile app available on the iOS and Android platforms. In conjunction with our Hospital Incident Command System, resident advisory council, and health system innovation center, we identified critical, time-sensitive policies for app usage. A shared collaborative document was used to align app-based communication with more traditional communication channels. To minimize synchronization efforts, we particularly focused on high-yield policies, and the time of last review and the corresponding reviewer were noted for each protocol. To facilitate social distancing and remote patient rounding, the app was also populated with a searchable directory of numbers to patient bedside phones and hospital locations. We monitored anonymized user activity from February 1 to July 31, 2020. RESULTS: On its first release, 1104 clinicians downloaded moblMD during the observation period, of which 46% (n=508) of downloads occurred within 72 hours of initial release. COVID-19 policies in the app were reviewed most commonly during the first week (801 views). Users made sustained use of hospital phone dialing features, including weekly peaks of 2242 phone number dials, 1874 directory searches, and 277 patient room phone number searches through the last 2 weeks of the observation period. Furthermore, clinicians submitted 56 content- and phone number–related suggestions through moblMD. CONCLUSIONS: We rapidly developed and deployed a communication-focused mobile app early during COVID-19, which has demonstrated initial and sustained value among clinicians in communicating with in-patients and each other during social distancing. Our internal innovation benefited from our team’s familiarity with institutional structures, short feedback loops, limited security and privacy implications, and a path toward sustainability provided by our innovation center. Challenges in content management were overcome through synchronization efforts and timestamping review. As COVID-19 continues to alter health care delivery, user activity metrics suggest that our solution will remain important in our efforts to continue providing safe and up-to-date clinical care. JMIR Publications 2021-02-23 /pmc/articles/PMC7903979/ /pubmed/33513562 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/24452 Text en ©Emeka C Anyanwu, R Parker Ward, Atman Shah, Vineet Arora, Craig A Umscheid. Originally published in JMIR mHealth and uHealth (http://mhealth.jmir.org), 23.02.2021. 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 JMIR mHealth and uHealth, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://mhealth.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Short Paper
Anyanwu, Emeka C
Ward, R Parker
Shah, Atman
Arora, Vineet
Umscheid, Craig A
A Mobile App to Facilitate Socially Distanced Hospital Communication During COVID-19: Implementation Experience
title A Mobile App to Facilitate Socially Distanced Hospital Communication During COVID-19: Implementation Experience
title_full A Mobile App to Facilitate Socially Distanced Hospital Communication During COVID-19: Implementation Experience
title_fullStr A Mobile App to Facilitate Socially Distanced Hospital Communication During COVID-19: Implementation Experience
title_full_unstemmed A Mobile App to Facilitate Socially Distanced Hospital Communication During COVID-19: Implementation Experience
title_short A Mobile App to Facilitate Socially Distanced Hospital Communication During COVID-19: Implementation Experience
title_sort mobile app to facilitate socially distanced hospital communication during covid-19: implementation experience
topic Short Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7903979/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33513562
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/24452
work_keys_str_mv AT anyanwuemekac amobileapptofacilitatesociallydistancedhospitalcommunicationduringcovid19implementationexperience
AT wardrparker amobileapptofacilitatesociallydistancedhospitalcommunicationduringcovid19implementationexperience
AT shahatman amobileapptofacilitatesociallydistancedhospitalcommunicationduringcovid19implementationexperience
AT aroravineet amobileapptofacilitatesociallydistancedhospitalcommunicationduringcovid19implementationexperience
AT umscheidcraiga amobileapptofacilitatesociallydistancedhospitalcommunicationduringcovid19implementationexperience
AT anyanwuemekac mobileapptofacilitatesociallydistancedhospitalcommunicationduringcovid19implementationexperience
AT wardrparker mobileapptofacilitatesociallydistancedhospitalcommunicationduringcovid19implementationexperience
AT shahatman mobileapptofacilitatesociallydistancedhospitalcommunicationduringcovid19implementationexperience
AT aroravineet mobileapptofacilitatesociallydistancedhospitalcommunicationduringcovid19implementationexperience
AT umscheidcraiga mobileapptofacilitatesociallydistancedhospitalcommunicationduringcovid19implementationexperience