Patient perceptions, opinions and satisfaction of telehealth with remote blood pressure monitoring postpartum

Abstract Background Our aim was to conduct a post participation survey of respondent experiences with in-home remote patient monitoring via telehealth for blood pressure monitoring of women with postpartum hypertension. We hypothesized that the in-home remote patient monitoring application will be i...

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Main Authors: Nicole A. Thomas, Anna Drewry, Susan Racine Passmore, Nadia Assad, Kara K. Hoppe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-02-01
Series:BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12884-021-03632-9
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spelling doaj-e646aab471274eef9dbb0f7ff39eb4682021-02-21T12:17:48ZengBMCBMC Pregnancy and Childbirth1471-23932021-02-0121111110.1186/s12884-021-03632-9Patient perceptions, opinions and satisfaction of telehealth with remote blood pressure monitoring postpartumNicole A. Thomas0Anna Drewry1Susan Racine Passmore2Nadia Assad3Kara K. Hoppe4University of Wisconsin-Madison, School of NursingDepartment of Obstetrics and Gynecology, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of WisconsinUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison, Collaborative Center for Health Equity, School of Medicine and Public HealthUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison Survey CenterDepartment of Obstetrics and Gynecology, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of WisconsinAbstract Background Our aim was to conduct a post participation survey of respondent experiences with in-home remote patient monitoring via telehealth for blood pressure monitoring of women with postpartum hypertension. We hypothesized that the in-home remote patient monitoring application will be implemented with strong fidelity and have positive patient acceptability. Methods This analysis was a planned secondary analysis of a non-randomized controlled trial of telehealth with remote blood pressure patient monitoring for postpartum hypertension compared to standard outpatient monitoring in women with a hypertension-related diagnosis during pregnancy. In collaboration with survey experts, we developed a 41-item web-based survey to assess 1) perception of quality of care received, 2) ease of use/ease to learn the telehealth program, 3) effective orientation of equipment, 4) level of perceived security/privacy utilizing telehealth and 5) problems encountered. The survey included multiple question formats including Likert scale responses, dichotomous Yes/No responses, and free text. We performed a descriptive analysis on all responses and then performed regression analysis on a subset of questions most relevant to the domains of interest. The qualitative data collected through open ended responses was analyzed to determine relevant categories. Intervention participants who completed the study received the survey at the 6-week study endpoint. Results Sixty six percent of respondents completed the survey. The majority of women found the technology fit easily into their lifestyle. Privacy concerns were minimal and factors that influenced this included age, BMI, marital status, and readmissions. 95% of women preferred remote care for postpartum follow-up, in which hypertensive type, medication use and ethnicity were found to be significant factors in influencing location of follow-up. Most women were satisfied with the devices, but rates varied by hypertensive type, infant discharge rates and BMI. Conclusions Postpartum women perceived the telehealth remote intervention was a safe, easy to use method that represented an acceptable burden of care and an overall satisfying method for postpartum blood pressure monitoring. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov identification number: NCT03111095 Date of registration: April 12, 2017.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12884-021-03632-9Postpartum hypertensionRemote patient monitoringTelehealthParticipant satisfactionQualitative evaluation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nicole A. Thomas
Anna Drewry
Susan Racine Passmore
Nadia Assad
Kara K. Hoppe
spellingShingle Nicole A. Thomas
Anna Drewry
Susan Racine Passmore
Nadia Assad
Kara K. Hoppe
Patient perceptions, opinions and satisfaction of telehealth with remote blood pressure monitoring postpartum
BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
Postpartum hypertension
Remote patient monitoring
Telehealth
Participant satisfaction
Qualitative evaluation
author_facet Nicole A. Thomas
Anna Drewry
Susan Racine Passmore
Nadia Assad
Kara K. Hoppe
author_sort Nicole A. Thomas
title Patient perceptions, opinions and satisfaction of telehealth with remote blood pressure monitoring postpartum
title_short Patient perceptions, opinions and satisfaction of telehealth with remote blood pressure monitoring postpartum
title_full Patient perceptions, opinions and satisfaction of telehealth with remote blood pressure monitoring postpartum
title_fullStr Patient perceptions, opinions and satisfaction of telehealth with remote blood pressure monitoring postpartum
title_full_unstemmed Patient perceptions, opinions and satisfaction of telehealth with remote blood pressure monitoring postpartum
title_sort patient perceptions, opinions and satisfaction of telehealth with remote blood pressure monitoring postpartum
publisher BMC
series BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
issn 1471-2393
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Abstract Background Our aim was to conduct a post participation survey of respondent experiences with in-home remote patient monitoring via telehealth for blood pressure monitoring of women with postpartum hypertension. We hypothesized that the in-home remote patient monitoring application will be implemented with strong fidelity and have positive patient acceptability. Methods This analysis was a planned secondary analysis of a non-randomized controlled trial of telehealth with remote blood pressure patient monitoring for postpartum hypertension compared to standard outpatient monitoring in women with a hypertension-related diagnosis during pregnancy. In collaboration with survey experts, we developed a 41-item web-based survey to assess 1) perception of quality of care received, 2) ease of use/ease to learn the telehealth program, 3) effective orientation of equipment, 4) level of perceived security/privacy utilizing telehealth and 5) problems encountered. The survey included multiple question formats including Likert scale responses, dichotomous Yes/No responses, and free text. We performed a descriptive analysis on all responses and then performed regression analysis on a subset of questions most relevant to the domains of interest. The qualitative data collected through open ended responses was analyzed to determine relevant categories. Intervention participants who completed the study received the survey at the 6-week study endpoint. Results Sixty six percent of respondents completed the survey. The majority of women found the technology fit easily into their lifestyle. Privacy concerns were minimal and factors that influenced this included age, BMI, marital status, and readmissions. 95% of women preferred remote care for postpartum follow-up, in which hypertensive type, medication use and ethnicity were found to be significant factors in influencing location of follow-up. Most women were satisfied with the devices, but rates varied by hypertensive type, infant discharge rates and BMI. Conclusions Postpartum women perceived the telehealth remote intervention was a safe, easy to use method that represented an acceptable burden of care and an overall satisfying method for postpartum blood pressure monitoring. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov identification number: NCT03111095 Date of registration: April 12, 2017.
topic Postpartum hypertension
Remote patient monitoring
Telehealth
Participant satisfaction
Qualitative evaluation
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12884-021-03632-9
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