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Barriers and facilitators influencing implementation of care technology for people with intellectual disabilities: A cross‐sectional study among care professionals

Nienke M. Siebelink, Annemarije Gaasterland, Marieke Gielissen, Sanne van der Weegen, Brigitte Boon, Agnes van der Poel

Year
2024
Citations
3
Access
Open access

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Implementation issues often hinder reaching the potential of care technology to improve daily lives of people with intellectual disabilities. We investigated barriers to and facilitators of implementing different technology modalities (app/social robot/sensor/domotics) in long-term care. METHOD: Care professionals (N = 83) from 12 Dutch disability care organisations completed a customised measurement instrument for determinants of innovations (MIDI) questionnaire. RESULTS: Out of 27 determinants, 20 were identified as facilitators and 16 as barriers. We highlight common barriers: few colleagues who work with the technology; no (awareness of) formal ratification of technology use; no arrangements regarding turnover of staff using the technology; unsettling organisational changes; technological defects and limited IT preconditions. CONCLUSIONS: The results, which could be combined and compared across study sites, provide insight into which implementation determinants were already well addressed, and where there is ground to gain when implementing care technology in disability care organisations.

Keywords

Cross-sectional studyNursingPsychologyIntellectual disabilityMultiple disabilitiesMedicinePsychiatryDevelopmental psychology

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