Abstract

Introduction: Adoption of virtual health (VH) solutions in healthcare has been challenging; this changed rapidly after implementation of physical distancing measures due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In response to the pandemic, British Columbia's Children's and Women's sub-specialty hospitals rapidly trained and scaled up support to equip staff and clinicians to use VH.Methods: Ninety-minute live online training workshops and frequently updated online support materials were offered for 6 weeks. Training was monitored via feedback collected at training sessions and a brief post-training survey. After training completion, a second survey was circulated to measure utilization outcomes and experiences with VH.Results: Eight hundred and ninety-five participants representing 82% of staff requiring support were trained through 101 sessions; 348 (38.9%) and 272 (30.4%) responses were collected for the monitoring and outcome surveys, respectively. Overall, 89% agreed that training was relevant to their needs; participants indicated average 58.1% (SD = 26.6) and 60.6% (SD = 25.2) increase in knowledge and confidence in VH after training; 90.1% had booked or conducted VH sessions. Increase in confidence was more pronounced in participants with lesser previous exposure to VH, but number of sessions conducted post-training and percentage of successful sessions were independent of previous exposure. For future training and support, participants suggested subject-tailored trainings, asynchronous trainings, and availability of experienced users.Discussion: Training is key to success of VH implementation. Moving forward, core competencies in VH should be developed to support standardization and allow for evaluation and quality improvement. Incorporation of VH training in continuous professional development and onboarding is also highly recommended.

Highlights

  • Adoption of virtual health (VH) solutions in healthcare has been challenging; this changed rapidly after implementation of physical distancing measures due to the COVID-19 pandemic

  • This paper explores the development, implementation, and evaluation of the training module designed to support staff to use VH and offers lessons learned on development and implementation of VH for healthcare providers

  • Changes in Knowledge and Confidence in Using VH Overall, the participants self-reported an average increase of 58.1% (SD = 26.6) in knowledge and 60.6% (SD = 25.2) in confidence after the training

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Summary

Introduction

Adoption of virtual health (VH) solutions in healthcare has been challenging; this changed rapidly after implementation of physical distancing measures due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite a global movement toward digital technologies, adoption of virtual health (VH) solutions has been challenging and slow [1,2,3,4]. This trend changed rapidly after the implementation of physical distancing measures due to the COVID-19 pandemic. VH, referred to as virtual care, telehealth, or telemedicine, is any non-face-to-face activity to deliver care It encompasses both patient–provider and provider–provider encounters. VH is considered a more patient-centered model, increasing access, offering comfort and convenience of being in the community, and reducing the cost and burden of travel to receive care [11, 12]

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