Litcius/Paper detail

Virtual Nursing for the Care of Hospitalized Patients

K. Jane Muir, Alexandra Maye, Matthew D. McHugh, Linda H. Aiken, Vicky Vo, Karen B. Lasater

2025JAMA Network Open7 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Importance: It is unknown if virtual nursing (VN) enhances care quality or improves the workload of bedside nurses in hospitals. Objective: To describe what services VNs provide to patients and nurses in hospitals; to evaluate whether the presence of VNs improves nurse workload and patient care quality; and to examine bedside nurses' experiences with VNs. Design, Setting, and Participants: This cross-sectional study using mixed methods included results from the 2024 Nurses4All survey conducted between December 2023 and March 2024. Eligible respondents were hospital-employed registered nurses in 10 states. Exposure: Experience providing VN-assisted bedside care. Main Outcomes and Measures: Bedside nurses reported the services provided by VNs and answered questions about VNs' impact on workload and quality of care. Nurses also answered the open-text response, "Please share any positive or negative experiences you have had working with virtual nurses." Results: The registered nurse sample included 880 respondents with a mean (SD) age of 44.2 (12.3) years and 13.3 (11.3) years of experience (92 Asian [10.5%], 87 Black [9.9%], 514 White [58.4%]; 84 [9.5%] with Hispanic ethnicity). The top uses of VNs reported by nurses were patient observation (434 nurses [53%]), admission and discharge activities (381 nurses [45%]), and patient education (306 nurses [37%]). The majority of nurses (483 nurses [57%]) reported that VNs did not reduce their workload, and among these, 81 nurses (10%) said VNs increased their workload. Of the 366 nurses (43%) who said VNs reduced their workloads, only 70 (8%) reported that workloads were reduced "by a lot." Slightly over half of nurses (452 [53%]) said VNs improved quality of care, but only 96 (11%) reported that quality was improved "by a lot." VNs had no impact on care quality according to 391 nurses (47%), with 34 (4%) stating that VNs reduced care quality. Nurses described the strengths of VNs for monitoring and documentation, and limitations related to staffing, patient distrust, and workflow inefficiencies. Conclusions and Relevance: In this cross-sectional study, there were mixed findings on VNs, suggesting such models should be introduced cautiously.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineNursingNursing careMedical emergencyMEDLINETelemedicinePrimary nursingFamily medicineVirtual patientWork (physics)Patient careSimulation-Based Education in HealthcareNursing education and managementTelemedicine and Telehealth Implementation