A double-edged sword - Telemedicine for maternal care during COVID-19: Findings from a global mixed methods study of healthcare providers

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Abstract

Introduction

The COVID-19 pandemic has led to a rapid and wide implementation of telemedicine for provision of maternal and newborn health care worldwide. Studies conducted before the pandemic, mainly deriving from high-income countries, showed telemedicine was a safe and cost-effective tool for delivering healthcare under certain conditions. The objective of this study was to document the experiences of healthcare professionals globally with the provision of telemedicine for maternal and newborn healthcare during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Methods

We analysed responses received to the second round of a global, online survey of maternal and newborn health professionals, disseminated through professional networks and social media in 11 languages. Data were collected between July 5, 2020 and September 10, 2020. The questionnaire included questions regarding background, preparedness for and response to COVID-19 and experiences with providing telemedicine during the pandemic. Descriptive statistics and qualitative thematic analysis were used concurrently to analyse responses, disaggregated by country income level.

Results

Responses from 1,060 maternal and newborn health professional were analysed. Among the sample, 58% reported using telemedicine, with the lowest proportion reported by professionals working in low-income countries (24%). Two fifths of telemedicine users reported not receiving guidelines on the provision of care through technology. Key practices along the continuum of maternal and newborn healthcare provided through telemedicine included online group birth preparedness classes, antenatal and postnatal care by video/phone, setting up a COVID-19 helpline at maternity wards, and online psychosocial counselling. Challenges reported technological barriers, lack of technological literacy, financial and language barriers, lack of nonverbal feedback, and distrust from patients. Maternal and newborn health providers considered telemedicine to be an important alternative to in-person consultations to maintain care provision during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, they also emphasized the lower quality of care and risk of increasing the already existing inequalities in access to healthcare.

Conclusions

Telemedicine has been applied globally to address the disruptions of care provision during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, some crucial aspects of maternal and newborn healthcare seem difficult to deliver by telemedicine. Pitfalls of health care provision by telemedicine include exacerbated inequalities in access to care, patient-provider communication problems, and a financial burden for certain healthcare workers and women. More research regarding the effectiveness, efficacy, and quality of telemedicine for maternal health care in different contexts is highly needed before considering long-term adaptations in provision of care away from face to face interactions. Clear guidelines for care provision and approaches to minimising socio-economic and technological inequalities in access to care are urgently needed.

Summary box

What is already known?

  • Telemedicine is the delivery of healthcare services by healthcare professionals from distance through using information and communication technologies for the exchange of valid and correct information.

  • Telemedicine for maternal and newborn health can safely be used to deliver certain components of care in highly controlled settings where the technology is available and accessible to patients

  • Telemedicine has been applied rapidly and on a wide scale during the COVID-19 pandemic to replace face to face visits along the continuum of maternal and newborn health care.

What are the new findings?

  • Maternal and newborn healthcare providers globally considered telemedicine of benefit during the pandemic and applied it on a wide scale for different aspects of maternal and newborn healthcare.

  • The rapid adaptation to provision of care via telemedicine was not optimally supported by guidelines, training for health providers, adequate equipment, reimbursement for cost of connectivity and insurance payments for care provided remotely.

  • Healthcare providers reported not being able to reach a substantial group of families by telemedicine and encountered different barriers in providing high quality maternity care by telemedicine due to challenges present worldwide, but more prominent in low- and middle-income countries.

What do the new findings imply?

  • Pre-existing inequalities in terms of access to high quality care might have increased by the large scale and rapid implementation of telemedicine during the COVID-19 pandemic in different settings.

  • Access to telemedicine for women was hampered by various factors such as internet connection problems, lack of the necessary equipment, digital illiteracy and distrust.

  • In-depth research is needed to formalise evidence-based guidelines for the implementation of telemedicine along the continuum of maternal and newborn care as lessons learned for building back beyond the COVID-19 pandemic and also for future emergency preparedness.

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