Virtual consultation in kidney care: a mixed-methods study on a model for safe and effective integration into routine clinical care.

Publication date: Jan 23, 2025

Globally, the COVID-19 pandemic necessitated a rapid introduction of virtual care delivery via telephone or videoconference. The rapid advancements in e-health technology facilitated options for virtual care, including asynchronous data transfer in virtual clinic models and patient-facing smartphone applications for communications and self-care. However, the clinical benefits of virtual consultation have not been consistently demonstrated in all facets of kidney care, and the adoption of this innovation alters workflows and health professionals’ perceptions of care delivery. This study evaluated the integration of virtual outpatient consultation safely and effectively into the kidney care programme in Alberta. We leveraged a mixed-methods approach to collate data about clinicians’ experiences and opinions, forming the basis for the qualitative part of the study. Data were collected through surveys, interviews and focus groups of nephrologists and home dialysis nurses. Focus group/interview transcripts for nephrologists and nurses were used to generate initial codebooks, which were iteratively refined throughout the analysis. Codes were categorised and analysed thematically, and data collected from nephrologists and nurses were analysed separately. The findings demonstrated that clinicians support the use of routine virtual care. Clinicians’ opinions on implementation requirements emphasised logistics for routine virtual care integration, quality of care delivered, impacts on the therapeutic relationship and regulatory policy clarification. The generalisability of the findings is limited in scope, as the study was conducted in a single nephrology programme in Canada, and may not apply to other provinces or settings. These findings inform recommendations for safe and effective virtual care delivery and can be leveraged to inform virtual care designs in kidney care programmes. Further study is required to clarify the impacts of virtual care on specific population demographics based on geography (rural vs urban) and age (elderly population) in the post-COVID-19 era, and determine how to effectively integrate patient perspectives into this model of care.

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Concepts Keywords
Canada Adult
Codebooks Alberta
Dialysis Chronic Disease
Rural COVID-19
Smartphone Dialysis
Female
Focus Groups
Humans
Male
Nephrology
Nurses
Pandemics
Qualitative Research
Referral and Consultation
Remote Consultation
SARS-CoV-2
Telemedicine

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19 pandemic
disease IDO quality
disease MESH morbidity
drug DRUGBANK Indoleacetic acid
drug DRUGBANK Etoperidone
disease IDO history
disease IDO site
disease MESH privacy
disease MESH Nephrolithiasis
disease MESH cysts
disease IDO immunosuppression
drug DRUGBANK Icodextrin
disease MESH renal insufficiency
disease MESH proteinuria
disease IDO symptom
disease IDO blood
disease MESH congestive heart failure
disease MESH emergency
disease MESH infection
disease IDO process
disease MESH uncertainty
disease MESH Cardiomyopathy
pathway REACTOME Translation
disease MESH chronic kidney disease
disease MESH Chronic Disease

Original Article

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