Transcript Chapter 19

Chapter 19
by Audrey Kinsella and Kathleen Albright
Telenursing and Remote
Access Telehealth
Objectives
• Explore the use of telehealth technology in
nursing practice.
• Identify socioeconomic factors likely to
increase the use of telehealth
interventions.
• Describe clinical and nonclinical uses of
telehealth.
Objectives
• Specify and describe the most common
telehealth tools used in nursing practice.
• Explore telehealth pathways and protocols.
• Identify legal, ethical and regulatory issues
of home telehealth practice.
Objectives
• Describe the role of the telenurse.
• Apply the Foundation of Knowledge model
to home telehealth.
Key Terms Defined
• Call Centers
• Chronic Disease
• Centers for Medicare and Medicare
Services
• Central Stations/Web Servers/Portals
Key Terms Defined
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Home Healthcare
Home Telehealthcare
Medication Management Devices
Outcomes and Assessment Information
Set
Key Terms Defined
• Medication Management Devices
• Outcomes and Assessment Information
Set
• Patient Health Outcomes
• Patient Informed Consent
Key Terms Defined
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Patient Health Outcomes
Patient Informed Consent
Personal Emergency Response Systems
Peripheral Biometric (Medical) Devices
Key Terms Defined
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Real-Time Telehealth
Sensor and Activity Monitoring System
Store-and-Forward Telehealth
Telehealthcare
Key Terms Defined
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Telehealth
Telemedicine
Telemonitoring
Telenursing
Key Terms Defined
• Telephony
• Teleradiology
• Telepathology
Nursing Aspects of Telehealth
• Understanding Telehealth
• Telehealth Interventions
Driving Forces For Telehealth
• What will affect nursing in the next
decades to come?
• Estimations by the year 2040
• The Nursing Shortage Crisis is Two-Fold
Driving Forces For Telehealth
• Health Resources and Services
Administration 2002 Report
• Pennsylvania Homecare Association and
Penn State University 2004 Study
• How many Americans are living with one or
more chronic conditions?
Driving Forces For Telehealth
• Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2005
Report
• Securing Necessary Resources
Driving Forces For Telehealth
• Baby Boomers are Shifting Health Care Needs
• Many Baby Boomers are More Comfortable With
Technology
• How much does the American health care system
spend on conventional medical care?
• Is this figure expected to grow?
• What is the solution for this growing need?
• The Use of Telehealth Technology
Telehealthcare
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“Telehealth” and it’s Broad Meaning
Store-and-Forward Telehealth
Real-Time Telehealth
The Use of Computers in Telehealthcare
Telehealthcare
Examples telehealth applications:
– Telemental Health
– Telerehabilitation
– Telehomecare
– Teleconsultations
– Telehospice/ Telepalliative care
– Remote Monitoring Devices
– Telephone Monitoring and Telehealth
Telenursing
• Telenursing
• The most developing area of telenursing
• Association for Retired Persons 1996
Study
• Care at Home
Telenursing
• The Home Care Industry’s Newest
Challenge
• Home Care Telenursing Involvement
• Home Care Telenurses Expectations
Terms of Home Telehealth
• Telecommunications-Ready Tools
• Multifunctional Telehealthcare Platforms
and Application Servers.
• Key Components to Telehealth
Terms of Home Telehealth
• Peripheral Biometric Devices
• What is the most popular household
communication tool for telehealthcare?
• A Telephone Device Can be Augmented
Terms of Home Telehealth
• Video Cameras and Videophones are Useful
Tools
• Personal Emergency Response Systems
Terms of Home Telehealth
• Sensor and Activity Monitoring Systems
• Medication Management Devices
• There are 32 million people that take 3 or
more medications daily
Home Telehealth Practice and
Protocols
• Different Home Telehealth Programs
• Informed Written Consent and Telehealth
• Telehealth and Patients
Home Telehealth Practice
and Protocols
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The Use of Telehealth Tools
Home Telehealth Protocols
Telehealth, Law and Ethics
A High Level of Security Must Be Achieved
The Patient’s Role in Telehealth
• What was a “mega trend” of Telehealth in
2007?
• Telehealth and Home Goals for the Patients
The Foundation of Knowledge
Model and Home Telehealth
• There is Much to Learn about “usual”
Home Telehealthcare
• Knowledge Acquisition and Telehealth
• Knowledge Processing and Telehealth
The Foundation of Knowledge
Model and Home Telehealth
• The Next Step After Processing Information
• Nurses Apply Data as it Pertains to the
Patient
• The Nurse Determines How the Knowledge
Will be Used
• Telehealth is Rapidly Developing
• Telehealth Will Provide New Advances for
the Medical Community
Thought Provoking Questions
1. Telehealth technology has extended the arms of
traditional health care delivery into homes, clinics,
and other environments outside the bricks and
mortar of hospitals. Will the increased use of these
telehealth technology tools be viewed as “dehumanizing” patient care or will they be viewed
as a means to promote more contact with
healthcare providers and new ways for people to
“stay connected” as in on-line disease support
groups), thereby creating better long term disease
management and patient satisfaction?
Thought Provoking Questions
2. As telehealth technology advances
towards seamless data access regardless of
distance or health system, how can we
protect patient privacy rights and the
confidentiality of personal medical data?