Views about perceived training needs of health care professionals in relation to socially assistive robots: an international online survey
Irena Papadopoulos, Christina Koulouglioti, Runa Lazzarino, Sheila Ali, Steve Wright, Ángel Martín‐García, Cristina Oter‐Quintana, Christiana Kouta, Elena Rousou, Katalin Papp, Radka Krepinska, Valérie Tóthová, Μαρία Μαλλιαρού, Paraskevi Apostolara, Małgorzata Lesińska‐Sawicka, Małgorzata Nagórska, Miroslava Líšková, Line Nortvedt, Lise‐Merete Alpers, Sylvia Biglete‐Pangilinan, Ma. Florinda Oconer‐Rubiano, Wireeporn Chaisetsampun, Nutchanath Wichit, Akhtar Ebrahimi Ghassemi, Ezzat Jafarjalal, Akile Zorba, Andrea Kuckert‐Wöstheinrich, R. Malla, Tomiko Toda, Özlem Akman, Candan Öztürk, Teresa Puvimanasinghe, Tahereh Ziaian, Orit Eldar‐Regev, Sara Nissim
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As Artificial Intelligence and social robots are increasingly used in health and social care, it is imperative to explore the training needs of the workforce, factoring in their cultural background. OBJECTIVES: Explore views on perceived training needs among professionals around the world and how these related to country cultures. DESIGN: Cross-sectional, descriptive, mixed-methods international online survey. METHODS: Descriptive statistical analysis explored the ranking across countries and relationships with three Hofstede cultural dimensions. Thematic analysis was conducted on the open-ended text responses. RESULTS: = 1284 participants from eighteen countries. Knowing the capabilities of the robots was ranked as the top training need across all participating countries and this was also reflected in the thematic analysis. Participants' culture, expressed through three Hofstede's dimensions, revealed statistically significant ranking differences. CONCLUSIONS: Future research should further explore other factors such as the level of digital maturity of the workplace. IMPACT STATEMENT: Training needs of health and social care staff to use robotics are fast growing and preparation should factor in patient safety and be based on the principles of person- and culture-centred care.