Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care (May 2024)

Provider’s satisfaction with telemedicine services for tribals of Western Rajasthan: A qualitative analysis

  • Rakhi Dwivedi,
  • Gopal Bohra,
  • Abhishek Bhardwaj,
  • Akhil Dhanesh Goel,
  • Bharat Choudhary,
  • Prem P. Sharma,
  • Pradeep Dwivedi,
  • Surjit Singh,
  • Pratibha Singh,
  • Kuldeep Singh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/jfmpc.jfmpc_1241_23
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 5
pp. 1708 – 1714

Abstract

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Background: There are significant barriers to healthcare access in tribal areas, even though for every 834 people, there is one public physician (registered allopathic and AYUSH doctors). More than 86% of hospital visits occur in rural areas. Furthermore, the bulk of them travel long distances to reach hospitals. A telemedicine center was established in the aspirational tribal district of Sirohi, Rajasthan, to provide accessible quality health care. Objective: To understand providers’ attitudes and satisfaction with telemedicine services for tribal populations. Materials and Methods: This cross-sectional, mixed-method study enrolled consultants from various clinical departments of AIIMS Jodhpur (n = 23) who provide teleconsultations to the tribal population. Result: The mean score of the satisfactory index was 54.7 ± 22.04. The higher score is 87.4 regarding the ability to use the technology platform during teleconsultation. The lower score was 34.7 for video quality during teleconsultation at STHR. 91.3% found this a beneficial model for the tribal population. Consultants providing teleconsultations expressed that this model is a boon for tribal patients as a screening tool and will save time and money for improved accessibility. Conclusion: Positive indications of teleconsultation with a provider’s utility, acceptability, and satisfaction. Most marginalized people can efficiently access all levels of (primary, secondary, or tertiary) health care from experts through telemedicine, which will broaden outreach in hard-to-reach or inaccessible tribal or rural areas.

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