Royal Hospital for Children, Glasgow is using video technology to help parents and provide them with non-clinically sensitive information at anywhere, anytime in a secure way.
One key challenge that many parents of pre-mature baby’s face is that they may live a considerable distance from the hospital. As a result, visiting the Unit to be with their child as often as they’d like can be difficult. During their baby’s stay in the Unit, many parents also need to continue their work and care for other members of their family too. This can be an extremely stressful time for mums and dads and who would really value being able to see their baby’s progress.
Neil Patel, Consultant Neonatologist, spent some time researching to try and identify how new technology might help. Neil said: “The idea originally came from a parent of one of our patients. He uses personalised video in his work to connect with clients and asked if we could send him video updates of his own baby. We then asked more families who all told us there is nothing more reassuring than actually seeing their baby. They thought video was a brilliant way of keeping them up to date with non-clinically sensitive updates when they were away from the hospital. Having researched the video technology available to us, we felt that vCreate ticked all the boxes. It’s a personalised video platform that makes it quick and simple to create a video which can then be securely accessed by the baby’s parents on any device at any time. When we spoke to vCreate and told them what we wanted to achieve, they were keen to help. We worked together to initiate a pilot programme to assess its impact.”
It was also critical that videos could only be accessed by the baby’s parents, which is another reason why vCreate was chosen.
Ben Moore, vCreate founder explains: “We have an optional feature on the platform which ensures that all videos are published internally behind our secure firewall and are therefore only accessible by approved viewers. Parents are given a vCreate Viewer Licence that allows access to videos of their own child only. As more videos are created a story is formed of the child’s road to recovery. The parents can then take the videos with them when the child leaves the unit as a memento. The videos are then permanently deleted from the system in line with data protection policy. Although it may sound complex, from both staff and parent’s point of view, it’s really simple to use.”
The clinical staff from the Unit can also measure the response rate by seeing which parents are watching the videos and for how long and these are some of the key measures, along with parent’s feedback, which will determine the success of the pilot.