Digital Technologies and the Role of Health Care Professionals: Scoping Review Exploring Nurses’ Skills in the Digital Era and in the Light of the COVID-19 Pandemic

BackgroundThe nursing role significantly changed following reforms in the nurse training process. Nowadays, nurses are increasingly trained to promote and improve the quality of clinical practice and to provide support in the assistance of patients and communities. Opportunit...

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Published in:JMIR Nursing
Main Authors: Valentina Isidori, Francesco Diamanti, Lorenzo Gios, Giulia Malfatti, Francesca Perini, Andrea Nicolini, Jessica Longhini, Stefano Forti, Federica Fraschini, Giancarlo Bizzarri, Stefano Brancorsini, Alessandro Gaudino
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2022-10-01
Online Access:https://nursing.jmir.org/2022/1/e37631
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author Valentina Isidori
Francesco Diamanti
Lorenzo Gios
Giulia Malfatti
Francesca Perini
Andrea Nicolini
Jessica Longhini
Stefano Forti
Federica Fraschini
Giancarlo Bizzarri
Stefano Brancorsini
Alessandro Gaudino
author_facet Valentina Isidori
Francesco Diamanti
Lorenzo Gios
Giulia Malfatti
Francesca Perini
Andrea Nicolini
Jessica Longhini
Stefano Forti
Federica Fraschini
Giancarlo Bizzarri
Stefano Brancorsini
Alessandro Gaudino
author_sort Valentina Isidori
collection DOAJ
container_title JMIR Nursing
description BackgroundThe nursing role significantly changed following reforms in the nurse training process. Nowadays, nurses are increasingly trained to promote and improve the quality of clinical practice and to provide support in the assistance of patients and communities. Opportunities and threats are emerging as a consequence of the introduction of new disruptive technologies in public health, which requires the health care staff to develop new digital skills. ObjectiveThe aim of this paper is to review and define the role of nurses and the skills they are asked to master in terms of new methodological approaches and digital knowledge in a continuously evolving health care scenario that relies increasingly more on technology and digital solutions. MethodsThis scoping review was conducted using a thematic summary of previous studies. Authors collected publications through a cross-database search (PubMed, Web of Science, Google Scholar) related to new telemedicine approaches impacting the nurses’ role, considering the time span of 2011-2021 and therefore including experiences and publications related to the first phase of the COVID-19 pandemic. ResultsThe assessment was completed between April and July 2021. After a cross-database search, authors reviewed a selection of 60 studies. The results obtained were organized into 5 emerging macro areas: (1) leadership (nurses are expected to show leadership capabilities when introducing new technologies in health care practices, considering their pivotal role in coordinating various professional figures and the patient), (2) soft skills (new communication skills, adaptiveness, and problem solving are needed to adapt the interaction to the level of digital skills and digital knowledge of the patient), (3) training (specific subjects need to be added to nursing training to boost the adoption of new communication and technological skills, enabling health care professionals to largely and effectively use new digital tools), (4) remote management of COVID-19 or chronic patients during the pandemic (a role that has proved to be fundamental is the community and family nurse and health care systems are adopting novel assistance models to support patients at home and to enable decentralization of services from hospitals to the territory), and (5) management of interpersonal relationships with patients through telemedicine (a person-centered approach with an open and sensitive attitude seems to be even more important in the framework of telemedicine where a face-to-face session is not possible and therefore nonverbal indicators are more problematic to be noticed). ConclusionsFurther advancing nurses’ readiness in adopting telemedicine requires an integrated approach, including combination of technical knowledge, management abilities, soft skills, and communication skills. This scoping review provides a wide-ranging and general—albeit valuable—starting point to identify these core competences and better understand their implications in terms of present and future health care professionals’ roles.
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spelling doaj-art-e4bfc53cdc2a4222b190b083c1ea5c972025-08-19T21:58:12ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Nursing2562-76002022-10-0151e3763110.2196/37631Digital Technologies and the Role of Health Care Professionals: Scoping Review Exploring Nurses’ Skills in the Digital Era and in the Light of the COVID-19 PandemicValentina Isidorihttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-4460-9662Francesco Diamantihttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-7130-9430Lorenzo Gioshttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-2981-0851Giulia Malfattihttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-9655-5064Francesca Perinihttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-6558-5060Andrea Nicolinihttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-9189-3697Jessica Longhinihttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-4198-075XStefano Fortihttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-3471-2033Federica Fraschinihttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-3551-8622Giancarlo Bizzarrihttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-3644-3615Stefano Brancorsinihttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-8410-7248Alessandro Gaudinohttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-8619-8350 BackgroundThe nursing role significantly changed following reforms in the nurse training process. Nowadays, nurses are increasingly trained to promote and improve the quality of clinical practice and to provide support in the assistance of patients and communities. Opportunities and threats are emerging as a consequence of the introduction of new disruptive technologies in public health, which requires the health care staff to develop new digital skills. ObjectiveThe aim of this paper is to review and define the role of nurses and the skills they are asked to master in terms of new methodological approaches and digital knowledge in a continuously evolving health care scenario that relies increasingly more on technology and digital solutions. MethodsThis scoping review was conducted using a thematic summary of previous studies. Authors collected publications through a cross-database search (PubMed, Web of Science, Google Scholar) related to new telemedicine approaches impacting the nurses’ role, considering the time span of 2011-2021 and therefore including experiences and publications related to the first phase of the COVID-19 pandemic. ResultsThe assessment was completed between April and July 2021. After a cross-database search, authors reviewed a selection of 60 studies. The results obtained were organized into 5 emerging macro areas: (1) leadership (nurses are expected to show leadership capabilities when introducing new technologies in health care practices, considering their pivotal role in coordinating various professional figures and the patient), (2) soft skills (new communication skills, adaptiveness, and problem solving are needed to adapt the interaction to the level of digital skills and digital knowledge of the patient), (3) training (specific subjects need to be added to nursing training to boost the adoption of new communication and technological skills, enabling health care professionals to largely and effectively use new digital tools), (4) remote management of COVID-19 or chronic patients during the pandemic (a role that has proved to be fundamental is the community and family nurse and health care systems are adopting novel assistance models to support patients at home and to enable decentralization of services from hospitals to the territory), and (5) management of interpersonal relationships with patients through telemedicine (a person-centered approach with an open and sensitive attitude seems to be even more important in the framework of telemedicine where a face-to-face session is not possible and therefore nonverbal indicators are more problematic to be noticed). ConclusionsFurther advancing nurses’ readiness in adopting telemedicine requires an integrated approach, including combination of technical knowledge, management abilities, soft skills, and communication skills. This scoping review provides a wide-ranging and general—albeit valuable—starting point to identify these core competences and better understand their implications in terms of present and future health care professionals’ roles.https://nursing.jmir.org/2022/1/e37631
spellingShingle Valentina Isidori
Francesco Diamanti
Lorenzo Gios
Giulia Malfatti
Francesca Perini
Andrea Nicolini
Jessica Longhini
Stefano Forti
Federica Fraschini
Giancarlo Bizzarri
Stefano Brancorsini
Alessandro Gaudino
Digital Technologies and the Role of Health Care Professionals: Scoping Review Exploring Nurses’ Skills in the Digital Era and in the Light of the COVID-19 Pandemic
title Digital Technologies and the Role of Health Care Professionals: Scoping Review Exploring Nurses’ Skills in the Digital Era and in the Light of the COVID-19 Pandemic
title_full Digital Technologies and the Role of Health Care Professionals: Scoping Review Exploring Nurses’ Skills in the Digital Era and in the Light of the COVID-19 Pandemic
title_fullStr Digital Technologies and the Role of Health Care Professionals: Scoping Review Exploring Nurses’ Skills in the Digital Era and in the Light of the COVID-19 Pandemic
title_full_unstemmed Digital Technologies and the Role of Health Care Professionals: Scoping Review Exploring Nurses’ Skills in the Digital Era and in the Light of the COVID-19 Pandemic
title_short Digital Technologies and the Role of Health Care Professionals: Scoping Review Exploring Nurses’ Skills in the Digital Era and in the Light of the COVID-19 Pandemic
title_sort digital technologies and the role of health care professionals scoping review exploring nurses skills in the digital era and in the light of the covid 19 pandemic
url https://nursing.jmir.org/2022/1/e37631
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