Telehealth News

Is Telehealth More Stressful for Nurses Than In-Person Care?

A new study out of the University of Missouri finds that nurses in some telehealth programs may be doing twice the work that they'd be doing treating patients in person.

Telehealth strategies

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By Eric Wicklund

- Telehealth is often touted as a method for improving workloads and reducing stress on healthcare providers. But a recent study is questioning whether those services actually put more pressure on nurses.

Undertaken by Chelsea Howland, a Doctoral student at the University of Missouri’s Sinclair School of Nursing and published in the Western Journal of Nursing Research, the study found that nurses involved in a remote patient monitoring program for patients living with type 2 diabetes were doing more work than those involved in typical in-person care programs.

“Telehealth can be an effective and convenient service for patients managing chronic diseases such as diabetes or hypertension, but what often gets overlooked is all the work being done by the nurses on the back end to assist patients,” Howland said in a press release posted by the university to accompany the study. “They are entering the data that receive into medical records, identifying instances when patients have abnormal blood glucose levels, reminding patients to self-monitor and submit their data, requesting input from primary care providers and making referrals to other providers for more specialized care.”

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