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Telehealth Programming Connects Nursing Students to Evolving Industry

Emily Barrett, assistant director of communications
A health care professional sitting at a laptop preparing for a telehealth visit

Virtual patient care has been a common practice by health care providers across specialties for decades. The ability to connect with patients from the comfort and safety of home broadens access and flexibility for both patients and providers. 

Though the concept isn鈥檛 new, telehealth and telemedicine services grew during COVID-19 when virtual care shifted to a necessity rather than a convenient alternative. 

Graduate nursing students practice delivering telehealth care.
Swartzbaugh (center) and Hodges (left) work together online to practice virtual patient care skills.

In response to this latest industry shift, graduate nursing students at the university鈥檚 Harrisburg campus are learning how to provide virtual patient care through newly incorporated telehealth programming this semester. 

鈥淭o translate an in-person visit to a remote visit is not always as easy as you鈥檇 think,鈥 said Kathleen Sheikh, assistant professor and assistant dean of nursing at the university鈥檚 Harrisburg campus.

The programming involves real-world practice conducting a simulated live telehealth encounter. Each simulation is observed by faculty to provide students practice with the method of care delivery as well as offer immediate feedback. Working within a simulated environment affords students experiences to advance telehealth competencies.

鈥淓ven though people are used to screen time, conducting an actual visit via Zoom, or similar platforms, is very different, added Sheikh.

Amelia Swartzbaugh, an eight-year nursing veteran with experience in telehealth, couldn鈥檛 agree more. A former Post-anesthesia care unit (PACU) and intensive care unit (ICU) nurse, Swartzbaugh currently works as a pre-admissions patient nurse at OSS Health, an orthopedic surgical group in central Pennsylvania. 

While the role gave Swartzbaugh some insight into remote patient care, it doesn鈥檛 compare to the nuances of telehealth. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 a totally different realm,鈥 said Swartzbaugh. 

The remote care lessons have been incorporated into an advanced health assessment course thanks to the support of Tom Bown, 鈥67, a 20-year member of the Board of Trustees who now serves as an honorary member, and his wife Bonnie. 

Alternating between the patient and nurse role, students work in pairs to conduct a simulated telehealth visit to gain experience guiding patients through an assessment to practice the skills and techniques that are specific to virtual appointments. 

Getting comfortable with having that screen in front of you and trying to figure out how to conduct your assessments and conduct those conversations through a computer screen or a telephone is definitely a new experience but it鈥檚 one that I鈥檓 glad that we got to do in school. 鈥擜melia Swartzbaugh, graduate nursing student 

During an in-person visit, nurses may run tests or exercises on patients to determine a diagnosis. Lack of physical, hands-on interactions in a virtual setting means that nurses must rely on other tools to conduct an evaluation. 

According to Taylor Hodges, who partners with Swartzbaugh for the exercises, patient interaction and cooperation is key to a successful remote visit. 

You have to have patients incorporated into the visit and learn to do some of the assessment for you because you can鈥檛 assess them by yourself. You have to have them do things with you, and understanding how to talk someone through that can be difficult. 鈥擳aylor Hodges, graduate nursing student

鈥淚t definitely gives you a whole new perspective when you have to instruct patients through a screen,鈥 added Swartzbaugh. 

Sheikh adds that this virtual experience will give students like Swartzbaugh and Hodges an advantage when they return to full-time practice.

鈥淸Telehealth] is not going to go away and the idea that even if it鈥檚 not used as much in the future, it will be an expectation of practice,鈥 said Sheikh. 

Explore Widener's Graduate Nursing Program

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