Abstract

Patient and family-centered care strategies see patients and families as valuable healthcare team members and are therefore treated as essential clinical partners to achieve safe, high-quality care. Traditionally, hospitals have relied on physical presence as the primary strategy for including families in shared decision-making. During COVID-19, widespread visitor restrictions removed this primary strategy. Hospitals rapidly deployed virtual communication tools to address the challenges visitor restrictions created. The rapid deployment produced benefits and unintended consequences, especially for the healthcare providers. Through a series of qualitative interviews with family members and healthcare providers, consistent themes were identified and mapped to the sociotechnical model. This project identified barriers to adoption and proposed corresponding success criteria. Although the project focused on implementing virtual communication in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, virtual communication strategies can likely support family-centered care goals outside of the pandemic context.

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