Clinician Perspectives on mRehab Interventions and Technologies for People with Disabilities in the United States: A National Survey

Mobile health and mobile rehabilitation (mHealth and mRehab) services and technologies have attracted considerable interest from healthcare providers, technology vendors, rehabilitation engineers, investors and policy makers in recent years. Successful adoption and use of mHealth/mRehab requires cli...

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Main Authors: John Morris, Mike Jones, Nicole Thompson, Tracey Wallace, Frank DeRuyter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-10-01
Series:International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/16/21/4220
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spelling doaj-9a78d08edead40c68aa154548941f00a2020-11-24T21:33:38ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health1660-46012019-10-011621422010.3390/ijerph16214220ijerph16214220Clinician Perspectives on mRehab Interventions and Technologies for People with Disabilities in the United States: A National SurveyJohn Morris0Mike Jones1Nicole Thompson2Tracey Wallace3Frank DeRuyter4Shepherd Center, Atlanta, GA 30309, USAShepherd Center, Atlanta, GA 30309, USAShepherd Center, Atlanta, GA 30309, USAShepherd Center, Atlanta, GA 30309, USADepartment of Surgery, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27708, USAMobile health and mobile rehabilitation (mHealth and mRehab) services and technologies have attracted considerable interest from healthcare providers, technology vendors, rehabilitation engineers, investors and policy makers in recent years. Successful adoption and use of mHealth/mRehab requires clinician support and engagement, including the ability to identify appropriate use cases and possible barriers to use for themselves and their patients, and acquire adequate knowledge and confidence using mHealth/mRehab interventions. This article reports results from a survey of rehabilitation clinicians in the United States on their attitudes, experience, expectations and concerns regarding mHealth/mRehab interventions and technologies. Over 500 clinicians in physical, occupational, speech, recreation and psychological therapy professions, among others, participated in the survey. Respondents reported that an overwhelming majority of their patients need additional therapy after discharge from inpatient environments, and over half of outpatients need additional therapy between visits. A large majority reported prescribing specific exercises and interventions for patients to work on outside of the clinic. However, only 51% reported being comfortable integrating mRehab technology into their practice; and only 23% feel knowledgeable about rehabilitation technology currently available. Technologies to support mRehab are maturing rapidly. Clinicians recognize the need for mRehab, but their knowledge and confidence prescribing mRehab represents a significant barrier to adoption.https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/16/21/4220mobile healthmhealthmrehabdisabilityrehabilitationinformation and communication technology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John Morris
Mike Jones
Nicole Thompson
Tracey Wallace
Frank DeRuyter
spellingShingle John Morris
Mike Jones
Nicole Thompson
Tracey Wallace
Frank DeRuyter
Clinician Perspectives on mRehab Interventions and Technologies for People with Disabilities in the United States: A National Survey
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
mobile health
mhealth
mrehab
disability
rehabilitation
information and communication technology
author_facet John Morris
Mike Jones
Nicole Thompson
Tracey Wallace
Frank DeRuyter
author_sort John Morris
title Clinician Perspectives on mRehab Interventions and Technologies for People with Disabilities in the United States: A National Survey
title_short Clinician Perspectives on mRehab Interventions and Technologies for People with Disabilities in the United States: A National Survey
title_full Clinician Perspectives on mRehab Interventions and Technologies for People with Disabilities in the United States: A National Survey
title_fullStr Clinician Perspectives on mRehab Interventions and Technologies for People with Disabilities in the United States: A National Survey
title_full_unstemmed Clinician Perspectives on mRehab Interventions and Technologies for People with Disabilities in the United States: A National Survey
title_sort clinician perspectives on mrehab interventions and technologies for people with disabilities in the united states: a national survey
publisher MDPI AG
series International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
issn 1660-4601
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Mobile health and mobile rehabilitation (mHealth and mRehab) services and technologies have attracted considerable interest from healthcare providers, technology vendors, rehabilitation engineers, investors and policy makers in recent years. Successful adoption and use of mHealth/mRehab requires clinician support and engagement, including the ability to identify appropriate use cases and possible barriers to use for themselves and their patients, and acquire adequate knowledge and confidence using mHealth/mRehab interventions. This article reports results from a survey of rehabilitation clinicians in the United States on their attitudes, experience, expectations and concerns regarding mHealth/mRehab interventions and technologies. Over 500 clinicians in physical, occupational, speech, recreation and psychological therapy professions, among others, participated in the survey. Respondents reported that an overwhelming majority of their patients need additional therapy after discharge from inpatient environments, and over half of outpatients need additional therapy between visits. A large majority reported prescribing specific exercises and interventions for patients to work on outside of the clinic. However, only 51% reported being comfortable integrating mRehab technology into their practice; and only 23% feel knowledgeable about rehabilitation technology currently available. Technologies to support mRehab are maturing rapidly. Clinicians recognize the need for mRehab, but their knowledge and confidence prescribing mRehab represents a significant barrier to adoption.
topic mobile health
mhealth
mrehab
disability
rehabilitation
information and communication technology
url https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/16/21/4220
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