Understanding patients' views and willingness toward the use of telehealth in a cancer genetics service in Asia
Telehealth is a growing field, its pertinence magnified by COVID-19 causing the accelerated digitalization of the world. Given the significant global demand to provide telehealth services, it is important to explore patient receptiveness toward this alternative service model, particularly from regio...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1605152022-07-26T04:03:25Z Understanding patients' views and willingness toward the use of telehealth in a cancer genetics service in Asia Sim, Jackie Shaw, Tarryn Li, Shao-Tzu Courtney, Eliza Yuen, Jeanette Chiang, Jianbang Nazir, Maryam Tan, Ryan Ngeow, Joanne Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) National Cancer Centre Singapore Duke-NUS Medical School Science::Medicine Attitudes Genetic Counseling Telehealth is a growing field, its pertinence magnified by COVID-19 causing the accelerated digitalization of the world. Given the significant global demand to provide telehealth services, it is important to explore patient receptiveness toward this alternative service model, particularly from regions where it has yet to be implemented. We conducted a cross-sectional study to understand the views and willingness of patients toward the use of telehealth for cancer genetic counseling. A survey was completed by 160 patients of the National Cancer Centre Singapore, and descriptive statistics were used to analyze the data. The study found that 95.6% (n = 153/160) of participants did not have prior telehealth experience. Most participants were willing or neutral toward having genetic counseling by phone (n = 114/160, 71.3%) and video (n = 106/160, 66.3%). However, majority prefer in-person appointments for first (n = 127/160, 79.4%) and follow-up (n = 97/160, 60.6%) visits over telehealth. Majority agreed that a phone/video consultation would meet most of their needs but voiced concerns regarding privacy and sharing of information (n = 79/160, 49.4% for phone; n = 74/160, 46.3% for video) and whether their emotional needs could be met (n = 61/160, 38.1%). Participants' age, employment status, income, mode of transportation to the appointment, and whether special arrangements were made to attend the in-person appointment were associated with receptivity to telehealth genetic counseling (p ≤ .05 for all). This study adds diversity to existing literature and demonstrates that patients from Asia are generally willing and accepting of the use of telehealth in a cancer genetics service. This will help meet increasing global demand of telehealth consultations in the post-pandemic new norm. Furthermore, it will also provide services for underserved populations and patients requiring urgent testing in a timely manner. Further studies are needed to explore the cost-effectiveness and fair billing methods, as well as willingness and acceptability of telehealth genetic counseling in post-COVID times. National Medical Research Council (NMRC) This work was supported by National Medical Research Council (NMRC). 2022-07-26T04:03:25Z 2022-07-26T04:03:25Z 2021 Journal Article Sim, J., Shaw, T., Li, S., Courtney, E., Yuen, J., Chiang, J., Nazir, M., Tan, R. & Ngeow, J. (2021). Understanding patients' views and willingness toward the use of telehealth in a cancer genetics service in Asia. Journal of Genetic Counseling, 30(6), 1658-1670. https://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jgc4.1432 1059-7700 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/160515 10.1002/jgc4.1432 33934420 2-s2.0-85104954862 6 30 1658 1670 en Journal of Genetic Counseling © 2021 National Society of Genetic Counselors. All rights reserved. |
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Science::Medicine Attitudes Genetic Counseling Sim, Jackie Shaw, Tarryn Li, Shao-Tzu Courtney, Eliza Yuen, Jeanette Chiang, Jianbang Nazir, Maryam Tan, Ryan Ngeow, Joanne Understanding patients' views and willingness toward the use of telehealth in a cancer genetics service in Asia |
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Telehealth is a growing field, its pertinence magnified by COVID-19 causing the accelerated digitalization of the world. Given the significant global demand to provide telehealth services, it is important to explore patient receptiveness toward this alternative service model, particularly from regions where it has yet to be implemented. We conducted a cross-sectional study to understand the views and willingness of patients toward the use of telehealth for cancer genetic counseling. A survey was completed by 160 patients of the National Cancer Centre Singapore, and descriptive statistics were used to analyze the data. The study found that 95.6% (n = 153/160) of participants did not have prior telehealth experience. Most participants were willing or neutral toward having genetic counseling by phone (n = 114/160, 71.3%) and video (n = 106/160, 66.3%). However, majority prefer in-person appointments for first (n = 127/160, 79.4%) and follow-up (n = 97/160, 60.6%) visits over telehealth. Majority agreed that a phone/video consultation would meet most of their needs but voiced concerns regarding privacy and sharing of information (n = 79/160, 49.4% for phone; n = 74/160, 46.3% for video) and whether their emotional needs could be met (n = 61/160, 38.1%). Participants' age, employment status, income, mode of transportation to the appointment, and whether special arrangements were made to attend the in-person appointment were associated with receptivity to telehealth genetic counseling (p ≤ .05 for all). This study adds diversity to existing literature and demonstrates that patients from Asia are generally willing and accepting of the use of telehealth in a cancer genetics service. This will help meet increasing global demand of telehealth consultations in the post-pandemic new norm. Furthermore, it will also provide services for underserved populations and patients requiring urgent testing in a timely manner. Further studies are needed to explore the cost-effectiveness and fair billing methods, as well as willingness and acceptability of telehealth genetic counseling in post-COVID times. |
author2 |
Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) |
author_facet |
Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) Sim, Jackie Shaw, Tarryn Li, Shao-Tzu Courtney, Eliza Yuen, Jeanette Chiang, Jianbang Nazir, Maryam Tan, Ryan Ngeow, Joanne |
format |
Article |
author |
Sim, Jackie Shaw, Tarryn Li, Shao-Tzu Courtney, Eliza Yuen, Jeanette Chiang, Jianbang Nazir, Maryam Tan, Ryan Ngeow, Joanne |
author_sort |
Sim, Jackie |
title |
Understanding patients' views and willingness toward the use of telehealth in a cancer genetics service in Asia |
title_short |
Understanding patients' views and willingness toward the use of telehealth in a cancer genetics service in Asia |
title_full |
Understanding patients' views and willingness toward the use of telehealth in a cancer genetics service in Asia |
title_fullStr |
Understanding patients' views and willingness toward the use of telehealth in a cancer genetics service in Asia |
title_full_unstemmed |
Understanding patients' views and willingness toward the use of telehealth in a cancer genetics service in Asia |
title_sort |
understanding patients' views and willingness toward the use of telehealth in a cancer genetics service in asia |
publishDate |
2022 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10356/160515 |
_version_ |
1739837446406799360 |