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Activity Monitoring in Parkinson Disease: A Qualitative Study of Implementation Determinants.

Authors :
King, Bridget Fowler
MacDonald, Jillian
Stoff, Laura
Nettnin, Ella
Jayaraman, Arun
Goldman, Jennifer G.
Rafferty, Miriam
Source :
Journal of Neurologic Physical Therapy; Oct2023, Vol. 47 Issue 4, p189-199, 11p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background and Purpose: There is interest in incorporating digital health technology in routine practice. We integrate multiple stakeholder perspectives to describe implementation determinants (barriers and facilitators) regarding digital health technology use to facilitate exercise behavior change for people with Parkinson disease in outpatient physical therapy. Methods: The purposeful sample included people with Parkinson disease (n = 13), outpatient physical therapists (n = 12), and advanced technology stakeholders including researchers and reimbursement specialists (n = 13). Semistructured interviews were used to elicit implementation determinants related to using digital health technology for activity monitoring and exercise behavior change. Deductive codes based on the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research were used to describe implementation determinants. Results: Key implementation determinants were similar across stakeholder groups. Essential characteristics of digital health technology included design quality and packaging, adaptability, complexity, and cost. Implementation of digital health technology by physical therapists and people with Parkinson disease was influenced by their knowledge, attitudes, and varied confidence levels in using digital health technology. Inner setting organizational determinants included available resources and access to knowledge/information. Process determinants included device interoperability with medical record systems and workflow integration. Outer setting barriers included lack of external policies, regulations, and collaboration with device companies. Discussion and Conclusions: Future implementation interventions should address key determinants, including required processes for how and when physical therapists instruct people with Parkinson disease on digital health technology, organizational readiness, workflow integration, and characteristics of physical therapists and people with Parkinson disease who may have ingrained beliefs regarding their ability and willingness to use digital health technology. Although site-specific barriers should be addressed, digital health technology knowledge translation tools tailored to individuals with varied confidence levels may be generalizable across clinics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15570576
Volume :
47
Issue :
4
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Journal of Neurologic Physical Therapy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
172432294
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/NPT.0000000000000451