Data for: Appreciative Inquiry Study of Asynchronous Teleconsultations (doi:10.5064/F6UURYON)

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Document Description

Citation

Title:

Data for: Appreciative Inquiry Study of Asynchronous Teleconsultations

Identification Number:

doi:10.5064/F6UURYON

Distributor:

Qualitative Data Repository

Date of Distribution:

2020-05-28

Version:

2

Bibliographic Citation:

Kumar, Pratap; Fry, M Whitney. 2020. "Data for: Appreciative Inquiry Study of Asynchronous Teleconsultations". Qualitative Data Repository. https://doi.org/10.5064/F6UURYON. QDR Main Collection. V2

Study Description

Citation

Title:

Data for: Appreciative Inquiry Study of Asynchronous Teleconsultations

Identification Number:

doi:10.5064/F6UURYON

Authoring Entity:

Kumar, Pratap (https://ror.org/047dnqw48)

Fry, M Whitney (Health-E-Net Limited)

Other identifications and acknowledgements:

Fry, M Whitney

Other identifications and acknowledgements:

Kumar, Pratap

Other identifications and acknowledgements:

Saidi, Salima

Other identifications and acknowledgements:

Kithyoma, Vanessa

Other identifications and acknowledgements:

Musa, Abdirahman

Grant Number:

CICF-INN-R1-033

Distributor:

Qualitative Data Repository

Distributor:

Qualitative Data Repository

Access Authority:

Kumar, Pratap

Depositor:

Kumar, Pratap

Date of Deposit:

2020-03-29

Date of Distribution:

2020-05-28

Holdings Information:

https://doi.org/10.5064/F6UURYON

Study Scope

Keywords:

Medicine, Health and Life Sciences, health care services, appreciative inquiry, telecommunication in medicine

Abstract:

<h3>Project Summary</h3> <p>Non-physician clinicians (NPCs) in low and middle-income countries (LMICs) often have little physical proximity to the resources - equipment, supplies or skills - needed to deliver effective care, forcing them to refer patients to distant sites. Unlike equipment or supplies, which require dedicated supply chains, physician/specialist skills needed to support NPCs can be sourced and delivered through telecommunication technologies. In LMICs however, these skills are scarce and sparsely distributed, making it difficult to implement commonly used real-time (synchronous), hub-and-spoke telemedicine paradigms. An asynchronous teleconsultations service was implemented in Turkana County, Kenya, connecting NPCs with a volunteer network of remote physicians and specialists. In 2017-18, the service supported over 100 teleconsultations and referrals across 20 primary healthcare clinics and two hospitals. This qualitative study aimed to explore the impact of the telemedicine intervention on health system stakeholders, and perceived health-related benefits to patients. Data were collected using Appreciative Inquiry, a strengths-based, positive approach to assessing interventions and informing systems change. We highlight the impact of provider-to-provider asynchronous teleconsultations on multiple stakeholders and healthcare processes. Provider benefits include improved communication and team work, increased confidence and capacity to deliver services in remote sites, and professional satisfaction for both NPCs and remote physicians. Health system benefits include efficiency improvements through improved care coordination and avoiding unnecessary referrals, and increased equity and access to physician/specialist care by reducing geographical, financial and social barriers. Providers and health system managers recognised several non-health benefits to patients including increased trust and care seeking from NPCs, and social benefits of avoiding unnecessary referrals (reduced social disruption, displacement and costs). The findings reveal the wider impact that modern teleconsultation services enabled by mobile technologies and algorithms can have on LMIC communities and health systems. The study highlights the importance of viewing provider-to-provider teleconsultations as complex health service delivery interventions with multiple pathways and processes that can ultimately improve health outcomes.</p> <h3>Data Overview</h3> <p>The data are from an Appreciative Inquiry study of a telemedicine service implementation in Turkana County, Kenya. The data were collected from key informant interviews and focus group discussions with:</p> <ol> <li> Non-physician clinicians (nurses, clinical officers) who requested teleconsultations</li> <li> Remote physicians and specialists who provided teleconsultations</li> <li> Physicians in the Lodwar County Referral Hospital</li> <li> Turkana County health system stakeholders</li> </ol> <p>Data collected included audio recordings and transcripts of the interviews/focus group discussions and participant drawings.</p> <p>Transcripts and drawings are not shared due to conditions of consent. Files shared include interview/discussion guides, consent forms and analysis codes.</p>

Time Period:

2016-01-01-2018-06-30

Date of Collection:

2017-01-01-2018-06-30

Geographic Unit(s):

County

Kind of Data:

coded qualitative data

Methodology and Processing

Sources Statement

Data Access

Notes:

<a href="https://qdr.syr.edu/policies/qdr-standard-access-conditions">Standard Access</a>

Other Study Description Materials

Related Publications

Citation

Title:

Fry, M. W., Saidi, S., Musa, A., Kithyoma, V., & Kumar, P. (2020). “‘Even though I am alone, I feel that we are many’—An appreciative Inquiry Study of Asynchronous, Provider-To-Provider Teleconsultations in Turkana, Kenya. <i>PLOS ONE</i>, 15(9), e0238806.

Identification Number:

10.1371/journal.pone.0238806

Bibliographic Citation:

Fry, M. W., Saidi, S., Musa, A., Kithyoma, V., & Kumar, P. (2020). “‘Even though I am alone, I feel that we are many’—An appreciative Inquiry Study of Asynchronous, Provider-To-Provider Teleconsultations in Turkana, Kenya. <i>PLOS ONE</i>, 15(9), e0238806.

Citation

Title:

Fry MW, Saidi S, Musa A, Kithyoma V, Kumar P. 2020. "'Even though I am alone, I feel that we are many' - An appreciative inquiry study of asynchronous, provider-to-provider teleconsultations in Turkana, Kenya." <i>medRxiv</i>.

Identification Number:

10.1101/2020.05.10.20097337

Bibliographic Citation:

Fry MW, Saidi S, Musa A, Kithyoma V, Kumar P. 2020. "'Even though I am alone, I feel that we are many' - An appreciative inquiry study of asynchronous, provider-to-provider teleconsultations in Turkana, Kenya." <i>medRxiv</i>.

Other Study-Related Materials

Label:

Kumar_Consent-Forms_All-Participants.pdf

Notes:

application/pdf

Other Study-Related Materials

Label:

Kumar_KII-and-FGD-guides_All-Participants.pdf

Notes:

application/pdf

Other Study-Related Materials

Label:

README_Kumar.txt

Notes:

text/plain

Other Study-Related Materials

Label:

Kumar_Codebook-with-Excerpts_ HEN-Appreciative-Inquiry-Research.pdf

Notes:

application/pdf