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Related Concept Videos

Barriers to Effective Communication II01:21

Barriers to Effective Communication II

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The barriers to effective communication also include cultural barriers, semantic barriers, gender barriers, and time constraints.
Cultural barriers:
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Telephone Orders
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Trends in nursing are multifactorial and associated with changes in society, within the nursing profession, and in other professions. Notably, telehealth and remote nursing contribute to successful healthcare delivery for numerous patients and help reduce stress for nurses due to nursing shortages. Nurses can reach patients, monitor their conditions, and interact with them using computers, audio, visual accessories, and telephones—for example, remote patient monitoring systems. Likewise,...
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Cost Containment
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Patient-centered care involves delivering care beyond inpatient hospitalization. Reflective practice can enhance a patient-centered approach. Reflective practice is a process of reasoning that considers all aspects of the present situation, including practicalities, learning from personal practice, and consideration of patient needs. Patients appreciate care decisions made while considering their input. Involving the patient in their care provides the patient with a sense of contribution rather...
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Gender-Based Differences in Patient Satisfaction With Telemedicine Visits.

Suneela Vegunta1, Paru S David1, Saira Khan2

  • 1Division of Women's Health Internal Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Scottsdale, Arizona, USA.

Journal of Women'S Health (2002)
|November 18, 2025
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Patient satisfaction with telemedicine and in-person visits shows minimal gender differences. Both men and women report high satisfaction, indicating telemedicine is a viable healthcare alternative.

Keywords:
access to caregender-basedin-person visitspatient satisfactiontelemedicine

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Area of Science:

  • Health Services Research
  • Digital Health
  • Patient Experience

Background:

  • Telemedicine offers solutions for healthcare access, cost, and patient time constraints.
  • Understanding gender-based patient satisfaction is crucial for equitable telemedicine adoption.
  • Previous research has not clearly defined gender disparities in satisfaction with virtual care.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate gender-based differences in patient satisfaction across telemedicine (video and telephone) and in-person healthcare visits.
  • To compare satisfaction levels between various healthcare delivery modalities.
  • To inform the integration of telemedicine into routine clinical practice.

Main Methods:

  • A large-scale patient satisfaction survey was administered to outpatients at an academic institution.
  • Patients were randomly selected to report on their recent healthcare experiences.
  • Data from 476,777 respondents were analyzed to compare satisfaction by gender and visit type.

Main Results:

  • Overall patient satisfaction was high across all visit types, with men and women reporting similar satisfaction levels.
  • Women reported 83.3% satisfaction with telemedicine and 84.1% with in-person visits.
  • Men reported 84.5% satisfaction with telemedicine and 85.7% with in-person visits, with slight preference for in-person consultations.

Conclusions:

  • Men and women exhibit nearly equal satisfaction with both telemedicine and in-person healthcare.
  • Telemedicine video visits were slightly less satisfactory than in-person visits for both genders.
  • Telemedicine presents a satisfactory alternative to in-person consultations for diverse patient populations.