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Accepted for/Published in: Journal of Medical Internet Research

Date Submitted: Oct 17, 2022
Open Peer Review Period: Oct 17, 2022 - Oct 24, 2022
Date Accepted: Dec 5, 2022
(closed for review but you can still tweet)

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Analyzing the Effect of Telemedicine on Domains of Quality Through Facilitators and Barriers to Adoption: Systematic Review

Kruse C, Molina-Nava A, Kapoor Y, Anerobi C, Maddukuri H

Analyzing the Effect of Telemedicine on Domains of Quality Through Facilitators and Barriers to Adoption: Systematic Review

J Med Internet Res 2023;25:e43601

DOI: 10.2196/43601

PMID: 36602844

PMCID: 9893735

Analyzing Telemedicine’s Effect on Domains of Quality Through Facilitators and Barriers to Adoption: A Systematic Review

  • Clemens Kruse; 
  • Anna Molina-Nava; 
  • Yajur Kapoor; 
  • Courtney Anerobi; 
  • Harshita Maddukuri

ABSTRACT

Background:

Telemedicine has a long history, but its efficacy has been reported with mixed reviews.

Objective:

To analyze the effectiveness of telemedicine through the six domains of quality through an analysis of RCTs in the literature published in 2022.

Methods:

Four databases were queried with a standard Boolean string. The 882,420 results were reduced to 33 for analysis. The systematic literature review was conducted in accordance with the Kruse Protocol and reported in accordance with PRISMA (2020).

Results:

A kappa statistic was calculated to show agreement between reviewers (k=0.90, strong). Medical outcomes associated with the telemedicine modality were 100% effective with a weighted average effect size of 0.21 (small effect). Many medical outcomes were positive but not statistically better than treatment as usual. RCTs reported positive outcomes for physical and mental health, medical engagement, behavior change, increased quality of life, increased self-efficacy, increased social support, and reduces costs. All six domains of quality were identified in the RCTs, but four were identified in 100% of the studies. Telemedicine is highly patient-centered because it meets a digital preference, is convenient, avoids a stigma, and enables education at ones’ own pace. A few barriers exist to its wide adoption such as staff training, cost, and it may not be the preferred modality for all.

Conclusions:

Telemedicine’s effectiveness is equal to or above traditional care across a wide spectrum of services studied in this systematic literature review. Providers should feel comfortable offering this modality of care as a standard option to patients where it makes sense to do so. While barriers do exist for wide adoption, the facilitators are all patient facing.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Kruse C, Molina-Nava A, Kapoor Y, Anerobi C, Maddukuri H

Analyzing the Effect of Telemedicine on Domains of Quality Through Facilitators and Barriers to Adoption: Systematic Review

J Med Internet Res 2023;25:e43601

DOI: 10.2196/43601

PMID: 36602844

PMCID: 9893735

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