Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Medical Informatics
Date Submitted: Apr 4, 2025
Date Accepted: Aug 11, 2025
Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.
Telehealth Outcome Categories for Patient Safety: Literature Review as a Foundation for the Preliminary Validation of the Outcome Categorization
ABSTRACT
Background:
Integrating telehealth into established care processes can be challenging. With the integration of telehealth into routine healthcare practices, there is a growing need to evaluate telehealth outcomes to understand its impact on healthcare delivery. However, existing literature on telehealth outcomes to support evaluation remains limited.
Objective:
Our aim was to analyze recent research from the past decade to develop a categorization of telehealth outcomes. This study seeks to validate a defined set of telehealth outcome categories and examine the broader impact of digital transformation on healthcare delivery.
Methods:
We built the telehealth outcome categories according to the existing literature. During the category-building process, we identified two main components: the patient safety outcomes of telehealth and the other care-related outcomes. To validate these categories, we conducted a literature search. The initial search yielded 65 unique articles. Following the screening process, we selected 15 articles for the review. In the review analysis, comprehensive data extraction points established a robust framework for evaluating the scope and impact of telehealth research across multiple dimensions.
Results:
Based on the analysis, six patient safety outcome categories were identified: mortality, adverse effects and harm, complications, hospitalization and readmission, diagnostic and treatment errors, and medication safety. The nine other care-related outcome categories include cost-effectiveness, access to care, and patient satisfaction. Despite a limited sample, the results on the patient safety outcomes of telehealth indicate a generally positive impact. Several studies have reported that telehealth services are associated with reduced adverse events, complications, and readmissions, and enhanced monitoring of patient conditions. The reviewed articles did not include use cases covering all identified preliminary outcome categories, such as medication safety and privacy. However, the review supported patient safety categories being well suited to classifying telehealth outcomes. The other care-related outcomes were not so clearly defined and would require more case examples to support category building.
Conclusions:
Further refinement of the main categories identified in this article is necessary to allow for the identification of specific areas and themes that warrant further research initiatives. Future research is essential to evaluate the true benefits and outcomes of telemedicine, offering deeper insights into its real-world impact. Clinical Trial: N.a.
Citation