Evaluating a telehealth intervention for urinalysis monitoring in children with neurogenic bladder

Author:

Carter Bernie1ORCID,Whittaker Karen2,Sanders Caroline3

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Health and Social Care, Edge Hill University, Ormskirk, UK

2. Faculty of Health and Wellbeing, University of Central Lancashire, Lancashire, UK

3. School of Nursing, University of Northern British Columbia, British Columbia, Canada

Abstract

Telehealth as a community-monitoring project within children’s urology care is an innovative development. There is limited evidence of the inclusion of staff and parents in the early-stage development and later adoption of telehealth initiatives within routine urological nursing care or families’ management of their child’s bladder. The aim was to explore the experiences of key stakeholders (parents, clinicians, and technical experts) of the proof of concept telehealth intervention in terms of remote community-based urinalysis monitoring by parents of their child’s urine. A concurrent mixed-methods research design used soft systems methodology tools to inform data collection and analysis following interviews, observation, and e-surveys with stakeholders. Findings showed that the parents adopted aspects of the telehealth intervention (urinalysis) but were less engaged with the voiding diary and weighing. The parents gained confidence in decision-making and identified that the intervention reduced delays in their child receiving appropriate treatment, decreased the time burden, and improved engagement with general practitioners. Managing the additional workload was a challenge for the clinical team. Parental empowerment and self-efficacy were clear outcomes from the intervention. Parents exercised their confidence and control and were selective about which aspects of the intervention they perceived as having credibility and which they valued.

Funder

Collaborative funding via Investment Voucher Agreement between University of Central Lancashire and BT

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Pediatrics,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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