Staff Successes and Challenges with Telecommunications-Facilitated Patient Care in Hybrid Hospital-at-Home during the COVID-19 Pandemic
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Mayo Clinic’s Hybrid H@H Model
2.2. Study Recruitment
2.3. Focus Group Interviews
2.4. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Demographics
3.2. Experiences in Implementing a New Telecommunications-Facilitate Care Delivery Model
- Theme 1: Quality of Care
When I think about the successes that we’ve had, we’ve served hundreds of patients now in a virtual hospital with a high severity of illness. These aren’t observation-level patients—they’re pretty sick. We have had generally excellent patient experience and stellar clinical outcomes. Our clinical outcomes in almost all arenas are far better than the same cohort of patients in the hospital. There’s some more research that needs to be performed in a randomized controlled trial setting, but, when we look at some of the initial information, it is a successful program.—Nurse Manager, Leadership Staff Member, Wisconsin
There’s a lot of leadership presence, I would say, across all the sites, so I think we probably catch things faster and quicker in ACH than in the brick and mortar. Having run a brick-and-mortar inpatient unit, and having worked in one, I would imagine that more things are just discovered, I think, in ACH.—Nurse Manager, Leadership Staff Member, Florida
In brick and mortar, you’re able to handle things on your own. You don’t need to go through one to two or three other people to get something done for your patient. Generally, you just ask your provider. They OK, and boom, it’s done. But this is a little bit different. You have to break that way of thinking, be able to plan out your day, delegate to the right person, work as a team. It’s a very, very big team environment, here in the department, which is very, very good because we’re all working in the command center, whereas working on the floor you have an idea that you’re alone and you don’t want to bother anyone. [Working in the command center], you can see how your coworker’s doing. If they’re having a little bit of a rough day you can ask, “Hey, can I take anything off your plate?”, and that is a general cultural here which is really awesome.—Nurse Coordinator, Frontline Staff Member, Florida
It’s across the true continuum of care. You’re seeing the patient whether they come in straight from the ER or we’re taking them from the inpatient setting. They’re stabilized, but still ill enough to come home because you still have to meet inpatient criteria. What does their life look like at home? How do we have to adapt? We’ve learned a lot about patients and what they do when they go home, and that we are making these patients’ regimens upon discharge too challenging for the average elderly, male or female, to follow. And so, we need to work on that. They’re taking too many medications at too many complicated times. And then we wonder why our heart failure patient comes back to the hospital because I don’t know that I could follow some of these complex regimens. I think that’s what we’re learning a lot about, medicine, and what we’re doing in the home hospital is actually impacting what we do in the brick and mortar.—Nurse Administrator, Leadership Staff Member, Florida
The amount of extra information you get from being in their home that you don’t get when they’re in the hospital is just profound. Seeing that bag of salty potato chips sitting on their counter saying, “Well, that’s probably one of the reasons why you have a heart failure exacerbation: due to noncompliance with diet.” That’s something that I wouldn’t get if I was not in their home, and so things like that are just so much more valuable. And you can get that really personalized aspect of care through this program that you can’t get in the brick-and-mortar hospital.—Physician, Leadership Staff Member, Arizona
With COVID-19 and everything else going on, we had 10-plus patients that would have been in an isolation room by themselves on Christmas, and they were able to be home with their families. And so, that’s a feel good, right? You have to think about those things.—Nurse Manager, Leadership Staff Member, Wisconsin
I think [ACH is] giving patient choice back, because traditionally, you’re admitted; you don’t really have a choice. You’re just admitted, so you’re either there, or you leave against medical advice. And so, this is offering patients a different avenue to receive care, but in their natural environment.—Nurse Manager, Leadership Staff Member, Florida
I had a gentleman that I talked to—a Wisconsin patient. I said, “Tell me about the program. What was it like for you?” And he said, “I’m going to be honest. You are on my turf, so I’m the boss. When I’m in the hospital, you’re the boss.” This felt different to me, and I was like, “That’s what we want.” You’re giving back the patient some autonomy that, as much as we work to try to not have them lose in the hospital, they are sort of at the mercy of our scheduling departments and various testing.—Nurse Administrator, Leadership Staff Member, Florida
- Theme 2: Care Coordination
Patients in the hospital will put on their very best face to be able to go home. And what we find is people are very agreeable to all the policies and procedures that we put in place… We really are at the mercy of the patient’s graciousness. I know, as providers we have faced a fair number of challenges where patients will say, “No, you can’t come in my home at X time. I’m tired. Come back later.” But, that’s not how this works. This is supposed to be just like if we were in the hospital. We could have access to that sliding glass door that would take us into the patient’s room. In theory, we should have the same level of access to the patient’s home, but the patient feels very territorial to their property as they should. It’s their home. But it really is the barrier at times to providing good care.—Traveling Daytime Nurse, Frontline Staff Member, Florida
We, for the longest time, had very limited insurance that we could pull from initially. Let’s say I’m your 85-year-old Medicare patient with 20 different comorbidities and my spouse at home has dementia. Nobody can take care of themselves [in that home] versus a young, relatively healthy person who just happened to scratch their leg on a hike up a mountain and now has cellulitis on their leg. She can walk and talk and feed herself. She is going to be an easier patient. Let’s say she has Blue Cross Blue Shield. Well, we didn’t have access to the younger demographic for the longest time.—Traveling Daytime Nurse Practitioner, Frontline Staff Member, Arizona
I try to explain to people that this is not hospital medicine. This is a hybrid. It’s not EMS. It’s not hospital. It’s a hybrid. And you’re going out into the public, you’re going out into their homes, and things don’t always work the way they do in a hospital. It’s not hospital-based medicine… I mean, it doesn’t matter what your socioeconomic background is, things can happen in anybody’s home.—Paramedic, Frontline Staff Member, Florida
We don’t integrate paramedics well into the brick and mortar [hospital]. And I will say that that is a very underutilized skill. They are wonderful members of the team. I was an ER/trauma nurse, so I worked with them both when they were coming in from the field and in the ER. But in in-hospital level of care, they haven’t been widely utilized, so [having them in ACH] has been wonderful.—Nurse Administrator, Leadership Staff Member, Florida
At the other sites, paramedic visits were allowed to be substituted for nursing visits as part of the [AHCaH waiver’s] required two in-person visits every day. Here, in Arizona, the rules required that those visits be done by an RN and not a paramedic; so, that added to our vendor challenges [until that] law changed in October of 2022. So, now, paramedic visits also can count as some of those in-person visits.—Physician, Leadership Staff Member, Arizona
The only hands-on [staff] we have at night are paramedics. Last week, I had a patient who was having issues, and both paramedics ended up at the house for a couple hours. Everything was delayed after that for every other patient in the program, and then they’re all dissatisfied and getting upset at us, so I think the biggest dissatisfier is for the patients that I see at night, when they’re transported so late and the transport keeps getting delayed and delayed; then, they get home and their meds aren’t there… or we can’t get their antibiotic or we didn’t get the CAD pump.—Command Center Overnight Nurse, Frontline Staff Member, Florida
Beyond a shadow of a doubt, having medications delivered in a timely manner, making sure that we have access to IV medications when we need them, and making sure that our pharmacy vendor understands that these are very sick patients, and we can’t miss doses of medication. Most of my time, aside from direct patient care in the home, is spent trying to figure out why medications that I desperately needed are not in the home.—Traveling Daytime Nurse, Frontline Staff Member, Florida
It’s getting better, and it’s mostly been infusion therapies that have been really hard to coordinate and get our outpatient pharmacies on board with thinking of this as hospital care, not nursing home care. They’re used to sourcing things to nursing homes and rehabs, so it’s a little bit of a different beast.—Traveling Daytime Nurse Practitioner, Frontline Staff Member, Arizona
To be in the restorative phase, you have to have met discharge criteria. When we think of the acute phase, it should model that of brick-and-mortar; so, in essence, it should be the same, despite the location. And then restorative, we think of that as they’ve been discharged. They’ve been sent to their—whatever location (we would presume home), with sometimes having home health services and sometimes not. Sometimes, we uncover that the patient should have maybe been in a rehab or a skilled nursing facility because maybe they’re not back to baseline and are not able (or their caregiver is not able) to care for themselves as much.—Nurse Manager, Leadership Staff Member, Florida
[Patients are] worried about how this is going to be paid. And we don’t really know, and we’re not sure if anyone really knows. You could say, “Call your insurance company,” but they’re not going to know probably what ACH is and how they are going to get billed for it because it’s brand new… I know as a frontlines nurse, sometimes, the one in that living room, in the kitchen, face-to-face with the patient, trying to talk them through all this when we sometimes or very rarely have any of the answers. I wrestle with that a lot. How do we provide that confident and professional level of care while still not overpromising because you don’t want to overpromise.—Traveling Nurse, Frontline Staff Member, Wisconsin
If it’s, say, a lab collection, like for a [central venous catheter], you can either have a nurse do it, you can have a paramedic do it, or you can have a phlebotomist do it, depending on when it’s needed in the day for the patient. The service coordinator can make the judgment call to say, “OK, we’re just going to have phlebotomy go out to do this collection,” but if they see the paramedic is available, and they’re also going to the patient’s home, they can bundle that activity while the paramedic’s in the patient’s home doing the assessment, maybe administering medication, they can also collect that blood. Then, either they could deliver it back to the Mayo Lab or we would have a courier service go pick up the lab [draw] from the patient’s home and bring it back.—Nurse Coordinator, Frontline Staff Member, Florida
- Theme 3: Experiences in Diverse Geographic Areas
I think there’s a big difference between a destination medical practice and a rural community health system. I think probably the best example is one of our very first patients had a really challenging socioeconomic situation. Her home was not the ideal home situation, as many, many of our patients experience. She had a lot of cats. There was animal excrement all over the home. I think there were some strange relationships in the family. And again, this is my perception—I think our team’s perception was this is really unfortunate and also common, and what can we do to help her be successful here? I think in Wisconsin, we are reporting less than ideal things—cigarette smoke, urine on the floor, a lot of cats—but how do we problem solve our way through that? I think on the Florida side, it was sort of like, “Well, that’s not a safe environment, so we need to discharge her, or she needs to go to a different place for care.”—Nurse Manager, Leadership Staff Member, Wisconsin
Our patients are not the same patients that are in Florida, and they do not have the same problems as the patients in Florida. Some of our patients can’t afford their medicines. It seems they don’t have that issue in Florida, and they have a hard time dealing with that, or it takes them a week to figure out the patient didn’t get that med, not because they were trying to cause problems, but because they couldn’t afford that inhaler that week.—Traveling Nurse, Frontline Staff Member, Wisconsin
I’ve never been to Jacksonville, so I don’t know. I’m sure they have poverty because there’s poverty everywhere, but it might look different. Northwest Wisconsin rural poverty definitely is a thing, and we both came from critical access hospitals, and we both worked in the ER. We saw a lot of just really sad, desperate situations. And there is no social support, like even just trying to get somebody a cab out of the ER who’s drunk in the middle of the night. I know you go to a big city, you can get a cab or an Uber, a Lyft, 24/7, without any effort at all, generally. And up here? Yeah, good luck trying to get a cab past 9 p.m., much less any other sort of thing, like non-medical transport. In a big city like that, they have vascular access services that can do it in the home, whereas, up here, as far as I know, I’m the only nurse in the area that’s ever done vascular access in somebody’s living room.—Traveling Nurse, Frontline Staff Member, Wisconsin
Where the challenge can occur is that if you have one patient on one side of town and another patient on the other side of town, and they both need infusions within an hour or two of each other. The infusion lasts for about an hour. You are most likely going to be late, and so you have to give the patient a heads up. “OK, I know it’s scheduled on your appointment here, that they’re going to be there at 9. They’re most likely going to be there closer to 10 or after 10.” You have to be able to communicate that. It’s like when you’re waiting for a cable provider to come to your home.—Nurse Coordinator, Frontline Staff Member, Florida
The rate of change is so, so fast that I can’t keep up, and I live it every day… these workflows change daily sometimes… so you show up to work, and 75 things have changed since your last shift. The fatigue that comes with trying to—it’s fine to do that for a period of time, but it’s been a year-plus of it… We haven’t had a month where there hasn’t been a significant change that has impacted multiple workflows, our frontline staff, everything that we do. And this has been going on for 13-plus months.—Nurse Administrator, Leadership Staff Member, Wisconsin
The state of Arizona developed a [H@H] pilot program through the Arizona Department of Health Services, and it has rules tied to it. The actual rules for the state are 30 min from the base hospital. That’s obviously a very vague term. Is that 30 min in rush hour? Is that 30 min in the middle of the night?—Physician, Leadership Staff Member, Arizona
I think there’s a lot of uncomfortableness in ACH because it is all foreign and new, and the leaders are learning with the frontline staff. And that can also probably be hard for frontline because frontline looked to the leaders to have all the answers, and we don’t have all the answers all of the time. We make our best assumption of how we think things should be. But at the end of the day, it might not be right, and it might not meet the needs of everyone, so it’s just trying to meet the needs of the greater group, which is not easy. I guess getting more comfortable with the uncomfortable is really important.—Nurse Manager, Leadership Staff Member, Florida
- Theme 4: Communication Challenges
The way we interact is different. It’s virtual. I would say 95 percent of the staff, probably higher, have never met each other in real life, and that’s really hard, because there is this level of disconnect, you know, that we’re working on improving. But, when you start off virtually the way we have, it’s pretty rough.—Nurse Manager, Frontline Staff Member, Florida
I have a middleman on everything… I can’t do my job and I can’t tell [the paramedic] exactly what I want done through an [outside] service coordinator who doesn’t have medical experience. It’s a risk I don’t want to take. I want to speak directly to the paramedic.—Traveling Daytime Nurse Practitioner, Frontline Staff Member, Arizona
I think one thing that we’re really grappling with is how do you leverage the skills of a nurse in the home to not compete with the skills of the virtual nurse, but to complement the skills of the virtual nurse? I think it’s a new model of care, and nobody’s figured it out, and it feels right now very much like we’re sort of fighting over who should do what, when probably there’s an opportunity for us to just come together and say, like, “I’m the nurse in the home. I’m the person that should do the respiratory assessment because I can actually listen to the patient’s lungs.” Like, you’re the nurse that should do this other assessment. I think it’s really important that we’re working on better defining those roles, not just for my own employees’ satisfaction.—Nurse Manager, Leadership Staff Member, Wisconsin
There are some specialty groups that have jumped on to the [ACH] model quicker than others, and then there are some logistics that still have to be ironed out, but we’ve done post-kidney transplant patients, post-bone marrow transplant patients. Those are very high acuity, complex medical conditions. There’s no way to do it without everyone working together. With our bone marrow, we have a separate rounding time so the entire oncology team can be part of the rounds, as well as our hospitalists in the command center, my team leaders, managers, and so forth. Everyone’s hearing the information at the same time, and everyone knows what the next steps are.—Nurse Administrator, Management/Leadership Staff Member, Florida
3.3. Experiences with Using New Technology to Monitor Patients at Home
- Theme 5: Technology Integration
[With video telehealth,] you can take a little bit more time to get to know the patient to learn how they do things in their own home. In the hospital, we don’t see that. We discharge them, but we often don’t know what happens once they leave. Are they successful with the directions they’ve given? Can they follow the regimens that they’ve been provided? You don’t hear about it until they get readmitted.—Nurse Administrator, Leadership Staff Member, Florida
Obviously, in-person care is different because it’s not—you know, you can’t hit a call light and have somebody in your room within three minutes. But I would almost—I would dare to say that their interaction with staff is probably quicker response time because they have a phone. They have an iPad. They get a lot quicker response to things than-than they would in the brick and mortar.—Traveling Nurse, Frontline Staff Member, Wisconsin
[In the hospital, as a patient,] you hit your call bell and you have to wait for someone to answer. And it’s usually the hawk that’s at the front. Then, they have to get your message out to the nurse or the patient care tech. And then, you have to wait for that person to come to your room to meet your needs, whereas, for ACH, when you hit that [virtual] button, you are able to actually talk to a nurse right away. You actually get your needs met right away.—Nurse Coordinator, Frontline Staff Member, Florida
With Bluetooth stethoscopes, being able to have whoever’s in the home and have the physician or provider in the command center be able to hear what they’re hearing, I think that has been really instrumental for the physicians. Bedside ultrasounds, right there, done in the home so that our team can see it at the same time, that’s a new adaptation that’s been great. Bluetooth temperature monitoring has been really helpful. We are also looking into technology that can help detect falls and, a lot of times, they don’t consider it a fall, so we’re learning more about that.—Nurse Administrator, Leadership Staff Member, Florida
Over time, the ordering process has improved, but that duplication is very scary to practice with because you know when you have to duplicate it can lead to errors, human errors.—Traveling Daytime Nurse Practitioner, Frontline Staff Member, Arizona
Apparently, our site was the first site that went to one of the new tablets. And something wasn’t working in the new tablets. For like a month or two, there was this really challenging issue where the video wouldn’t pop up for the video visits. It would pop up if you connected one way, but if you connected another way, it wouldn’t, and it was just something that you know. It didn’t get escalated very quickly. Finally, when the advanced practice providers brought it to my attention, that it still hadn’t been fixed, one or two emails get sent out and, within a day, the problem was solved. Anytime you’re on the edge of what’s the norm, you’re going to face challenges like that.—Physician, Leadership Staff Member, Arizona
The software is 100% different than it was when we first went live. It was more of a portal of contact with the patient, similar to a video call and some vitals that you could save. Now, it has evolved to the nurses scheduling through that software… We meet a couple times a month, and I have frontline nurses on there, as well as my nurse manager and a nursing program coordinator, to make sure that we’re not only hearing the voice of the frontline users, but also achieving common goals for both us and our [platform vendor]. It has to work for everyone, but most changes that have occurred have been the result of the nurses’ voice.—Nurse Administrator, Leadership Staff Member, Florida
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Focus Group Interview Question Prompts
- (1)
- How did you get involved with Advanced Care at Home?
- (2)
- What challenges or barriers do you face in delivering Advanced Care at Home?
- (3)
- How frequently do you interact with patients in Advanced Care at Home?
- (4)
- How frequently do you interact with other staff in Advanced Care at Home?
- (5)
- What recommendations do you have to improve Advanced Care at Home?
Appendix B. Codebook
Code | Description | Quote Example |
Communication challenges | Barriers to communication within staff teams, between staff and patients, or across hospital sites/states | I think that normally [ACH] would’ve been largely virtual, no matter what the external geopolitical forces, because of the nature of the logistical structure with a command center and all these different moving pieces. It’s constant communication electronically by phone and email, and disconnected entities have cultural practice differences. |
Care coordination | Participant descriptions of the complexity of coordinating care for hybrid home hospital delivery | Hospitals, as much as we don’t realize it, run pretty seamlessly. A doctor places an order for an intervention or a test, and it sort of just happens. It goes through a queue and the computer, and then you can schedule accordingly, but it’s all done behind the scenes, so nurses don’t typically see that side of things. We don’t really have that in the home hospital. There’s another person in the mix scheduling the appointments. The nurses in the command center found that they were in a lot of that coordination, clinically triaging what’s more appropriate to happen first and so forth: “OK, it’s really important that they get this chest X-ray, but it’s also important that they see physical therapy today.” It’s not just the click of a button. |
Experiences in diverse geographic areas | Any comments related to how staff in rural, urban, or desert areas deliver care or interact with patients and other staff | I think maybe it’s easier in a destination medical practice to say, “Wait, this patient has a lot of stuff going on. They’re not a patient that we’re going to take care of,” or maybe you just don’t see those patients as much in a destination medical practice. That has definitely been challenging, as I think it’s probably hard for the Florida team to really understand the level of socioeconomic and social determinants of health impact that we’re dealing with in our patient homes. |
Quality of care | Staff discussion of how the hybrid home hospital model impacts the quality of care delivered (patient outcomes and satisfaction) | We’ve been able to take a lot of people home and have them do well in their home environment and be really appreciative of the care that we get to provide in the home. I think that’s a success, providing high-level care in their house and having them be so appreciative to be home. |
Technology integration | Any comments related to the use of technology in hybrid home hospital delivery | Technology, technology, and technology. Sometimes it works well. Sometimes it doesn’t work at all. |
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Selected Sociodemographic Characteristics for Focus Group Interviews | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Interview 1 | Interview 2 | Interview 3 | Interview 4 | Interview 5 | Interview 6 | |
Number of Participants | 3 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 2 |
Sex | ||||||
Male | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Female | 2 | 1 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
Race/Ethnicity | ||||||
White | 3 | 2 | 3 | 0 | 2 | 2 |
Hispanic | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Asian | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Location | ||||||
Wisconsin | 3 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Florida | 0 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 0 |
Arizona | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
Staff Role | ||||||
Frontline Staff | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
Leadership | 1 | 1 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
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Zawada, S.K.; Sweat, J.; Paulson, M.R.; Maniaci, M.J. Staff Successes and Challenges with Telecommunications-Facilitated Patient Care in Hybrid Hospital-at-Home during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Healthcare 2023, 11, 1223. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11091223
Zawada SK, Sweat J, Paulson MR, Maniaci MJ. Staff Successes and Challenges with Telecommunications-Facilitated Patient Care in Hybrid Hospital-at-Home during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Healthcare. 2023; 11(9):1223. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11091223
Chicago/Turabian StyleZawada, Stephanie K., Jeffrey Sweat, Margaret R. Paulson, and Michael J. Maniaci. 2023. "Staff Successes and Challenges with Telecommunications-Facilitated Patient Care in Hybrid Hospital-at-Home during the COVID-19 Pandemic" Healthcare 11, no. 9: 1223. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11091223
APA StyleZawada, S. K., Sweat, J., Paulson, M. R., & Maniaci, M. J. (2023). Staff Successes and Challenges with Telecommunications-Facilitated Patient Care in Hybrid Hospital-at-Home during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Healthcare, 11(9), 1223. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11091223