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Findings and Guidelines on Provider Technology, Fatigue, and Well-being: Scoping Review

BACKGROUND: Video and other technologies are reshaping the delivery of health care, yet barriers related to workflow and possible provider fatigue suggest that a thorough evaluation is needed for quality and process improvement. OBJECTIVE: This scoping review explored the relationship among technolo...

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Autores principales: Hilty, Donald M, Armstrong, Christina M, Smout, Shelby A, Crawford, Allison, Maheu, Marlene M, Drude, Kenneth P, Chan, Steven, Yellowlees, Peter M, Krupinski, Elizabeth A
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9178447/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35612880
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/34451
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author Hilty, Donald M
Armstrong, Christina M
Smout, Shelby A
Crawford, Allison
Maheu, Marlene M
Drude, Kenneth P
Chan, Steven
Yellowlees, Peter M
Krupinski, Elizabeth A
author_facet Hilty, Donald M
Armstrong, Christina M
Smout, Shelby A
Crawford, Allison
Maheu, Marlene M
Drude, Kenneth P
Chan, Steven
Yellowlees, Peter M
Krupinski, Elizabeth A
author_sort Hilty, Donald M
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Video and other technologies are reshaping the delivery of health care, yet barriers related to workflow and possible provider fatigue suggest that a thorough evaluation is needed for quality and process improvement. OBJECTIVE: This scoping review explored the relationship among technology, fatigue, and health care to improve the conditions for providers. METHODS: A 6-stage scoping review of literature (from 10 databases) published from 2000 to 2020 that focused on technology, health care, and fatigue was conducted. Technologies included synchronous video, telephone, informatics systems, asynchronous wearable sensors, and mobile health devices for health care in 4 concept areas related to provider experience: behavioral, cognitive, emotional, and physical impact; workplace at the individual, clinic, hospital, and system or organizational levels; well-being, burnout, and stress; and perceptions regarding technology. Qualitative content, discourse, and framework analyses were used to thematically analyze data for developing a spectrum of health to risk of fatigue to manifestations of burnout. RESULTS: Of the 4221 potential literature references, 202 (4.79%) were duplicates, and our review of the titles and abstracts of 4019 (95.21%) found that 3837 (90.9%) were irrelevant. A full-text review of 182 studies revealed that 12 (6.6%) studies met all the criteria related to technology, health care, and fatigue, and these studied the behavioral, emotional, cognitive, and physical impact of workflow at the individual, hospital, and system or organizational levels. Video and electronic health record use has been associated with physical eye fatigue; neck pain; stress; tiredness; and behavioral impacts related to additional effort owing to barriers, trouble with engagement, emotional wear and tear and exhaustion, cognitive inattention, effort, expecting problems, multitasking and workload, and emotional experiences (eg, anger, irritability, stress, and concern about well-being). An additional 14 studies that evaluated behavioral, emotional, and cognitive impacts without focusing on fatigue found high user ratings on data quality, accuracy, and processing but low satisfaction with clerical tasks, the effort required in work, and interruptions costing time, resulting in more errors, stress, and frustration. Our qualitative analysis suggests a spectrum from health to risk and provides an outline of organizational approaches to human factors and technology in health care. Business, occupational health, human factors, and well-being literature have not studied technology fatigue and burnout; however, their findings help contextualize technology-based fatigue to suggest guidelines. Few studies were found to contextually evaluate differences according to health professions and practice contexts. CONCLUSIONS: Health care systems need to evaluate the impact of technology in accordance with the Quadruple Aim to support providers’ well-being and prevent workload burden, fatigue, and burnout. Implementation and effectiveness approaches and a multilevel approach with objective measures for clinical, human factors, training, professional development, and administrative workflow are suggested. This requires institutional strategies and competencies to integrate health care quality, technology and well-being outcomes.
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spelling pubmed-91784472022-06-10 Findings and Guidelines on Provider Technology, Fatigue, and Well-being: Scoping Review Hilty, Donald M Armstrong, Christina M Smout, Shelby A Crawford, Allison Maheu, Marlene M Drude, Kenneth P Chan, Steven Yellowlees, Peter M Krupinski, Elizabeth A J Med Internet Res Review BACKGROUND: Video and other technologies are reshaping the delivery of health care, yet barriers related to workflow and possible provider fatigue suggest that a thorough evaluation is needed for quality and process improvement. OBJECTIVE: This scoping review explored the relationship among technology, fatigue, and health care to improve the conditions for providers. METHODS: A 6-stage scoping review of literature (from 10 databases) published from 2000 to 2020 that focused on technology, health care, and fatigue was conducted. Technologies included synchronous video, telephone, informatics systems, asynchronous wearable sensors, and mobile health devices for health care in 4 concept areas related to provider experience: behavioral, cognitive, emotional, and physical impact; workplace at the individual, clinic, hospital, and system or organizational levels; well-being, burnout, and stress; and perceptions regarding technology. Qualitative content, discourse, and framework analyses were used to thematically analyze data for developing a spectrum of health to risk of fatigue to manifestations of burnout. RESULTS: Of the 4221 potential literature references, 202 (4.79%) were duplicates, and our review of the titles and abstracts of 4019 (95.21%) found that 3837 (90.9%) were irrelevant. A full-text review of 182 studies revealed that 12 (6.6%) studies met all the criteria related to technology, health care, and fatigue, and these studied the behavioral, emotional, cognitive, and physical impact of workflow at the individual, hospital, and system or organizational levels. Video and electronic health record use has been associated with physical eye fatigue; neck pain; stress; tiredness; and behavioral impacts related to additional effort owing to barriers, trouble with engagement, emotional wear and tear and exhaustion, cognitive inattention, effort, expecting problems, multitasking and workload, and emotional experiences (eg, anger, irritability, stress, and concern about well-being). An additional 14 studies that evaluated behavioral, emotional, and cognitive impacts without focusing on fatigue found high user ratings on data quality, accuracy, and processing but low satisfaction with clerical tasks, the effort required in work, and interruptions costing time, resulting in more errors, stress, and frustration. Our qualitative analysis suggests a spectrum from health to risk and provides an outline of organizational approaches to human factors and technology in health care. Business, occupational health, human factors, and well-being literature have not studied technology fatigue and burnout; however, their findings help contextualize technology-based fatigue to suggest guidelines. Few studies were found to contextually evaluate differences according to health professions and practice contexts. CONCLUSIONS: Health care systems need to evaluate the impact of technology in accordance with the Quadruple Aim to support providers’ well-being and prevent workload burden, fatigue, and burnout. Implementation and effectiveness approaches and a multilevel approach with objective measures for clinical, human factors, training, professional development, and administrative workflow are suggested. This requires institutional strategies and competencies to integrate health care quality, technology and well-being outcomes. JMIR Publications 2022-05-25 /pmc/articles/PMC9178447/ /pubmed/35612880 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/34451 Text en ©Donald M Hilty, Christina M Armstrong, Shelby A Smout, Allison Crawford, Marlene M Maheu, Kenneth P Drude, Steven Chan, Peter M Yellowlees, Elizabeth A Krupinski. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (https://www.jmir.org), 25.05.2022. 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 https://www.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Review
Hilty, Donald M
Armstrong, Christina M
Smout, Shelby A
Crawford, Allison
Maheu, Marlene M
Drude, Kenneth P
Chan, Steven
Yellowlees, Peter M
Krupinski, Elizabeth A
Findings and Guidelines on Provider Technology, Fatigue, and Well-being: Scoping Review
title Findings and Guidelines on Provider Technology, Fatigue, and Well-being: Scoping Review
title_full Findings and Guidelines on Provider Technology, Fatigue, and Well-being: Scoping Review
title_fullStr Findings and Guidelines on Provider Technology, Fatigue, and Well-being: Scoping Review
title_full_unstemmed Findings and Guidelines on Provider Technology, Fatigue, and Well-being: Scoping Review
title_short Findings and Guidelines on Provider Technology, Fatigue, and Well-being: Scoping Review
title_sort findings and guidelines on provider technology, fatigue, and well-being: scoping review
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9178447/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35612880
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/34451
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