Nursing interventions in a telemonitoring program

Bonnie J Wakefield, Melody Scherubel, Annette Ray, John E Holman, Bonnie J Wakefield, Melody Scherubel, Annette Ray, John E Holman

Abstract

Background: The use of telemonitoring of patients with chronic illness in their homes is growing. Current literature does not describe what types of patient problems are addressed by nurses in these programs and what actions are taken in response to identified problems. This study defined and analyzed patient problems and nursing actions delivered in a telemonitoring program focused on chronic disease management.

Subjects and methods: Data were drawn from a clinical trial that evaluated telemonitoring in patients with comorbid diabetes and hypertension. Using study patient records, patient problems and nursing actions were coded using an inductive approach.

Results: In total, 2,336 actions were coded for 68 and 65 participants in two intervention groups. The most frequent reasons for contact were reporting information to the primary care provider and lifestyle information related to diabetes and hypertension (e.g., diet, smoking cessation, foot care, and social contacts). The most frequent mode of contact was the study sending a letter to a participant.

Conclusions: Detailed descriptions of interventions delivered facilitate analysis of the unique contributions of nurses in the expanding market of telemonitoring, enable identification of the appropriate number and combination of interventions needed to improve outcomes, and make possible more systematic translation of findings to practice. Furthermore, this information can inform calculation of appropriate panel sizes for care managers and the competencies needed to provide this care.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00119054.

Figures

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Fig. 1.
Sample algorithm: exercise.

Source: PubMed

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