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Stakeholder perceptions of factors contributing to effective implementation of exercise cardiac telerehabilitation in clinical practice

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-02, 05:52 authored by Jonathan RawstornJonathan Rawstorn, Narayan SubediNarayan Subedi, Harriet KoortsHarriet Koorts, Luke Evans, Susie CartledgeSusie Cartledge, Matthew P Wallen, Fergal M Grace, Shariful Islam, Ralph MaddisonRalph Maddison
Abstract Aims Cardiac exercise telerehabilitation is effective and can be cost-effective for managing ischaemic heart disease, but implementation of evidence-based interventions in clinical practice remains a challenge. We aimed to identify factors that cardiac rehabilitation stakeholders perceived could influence the effectiveness of implementing an evidence-based, real-time remotely monitored cardiac exercise telerehabilitation intervention (REMOTE-CR). Methods and results Online interviews and focus groups were conducted with cardiac rehabilitation consumers (n = 16, 5 female, 61.1 ± 10.0 years), practitioners (n = 20, 14 female; 36.6 ± 11.8 years), and health service managers (n = 11, 7 female; 46.2 ± 9.2 years) recruited from one metropolitan and three inner-regional healthcare services in Western Victoria, Australia. Discussions were guided by two theoretical frameworks (Non-adoption, Abandonment, Scale-up, Spread, and Sustainability; Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research), and analysed thematically. Factors perceived to influence effective implementation of REMOTE-CR spanned all domains of the theoretical frameworks, related to six major themes (resources, change management, stakeholder targeting, knowledge, intervention design, security) and were largely consistent across study sites; however, the relative importance of each factor may vary between sites. Conclusion Effective implementation of exercise telerehabilitation interventions like REMOTE-CR will require a coordinated context-specific approach that considers factors across all levels of the healthcare system and implementation science frameworks. Key requirements include prioritizing resources, managing change, selecting target stakeholders, developing digital health capabilities, and selecting fit-for-purpose technologies that enable programme delivery objectives.

History

Related Materials

Location

Oxford, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

European Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing

Volume

24

Pagination

116-125

ISSN

1474-5151

eISSN

1873-1953

Issue

1

Publisher

Oxford University Press