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The GRACE video-telehealth project protocol: a mixed-methods study to improve quality, safety and acceptability of video-telehealth in Australian general practice and residential aged care

Christopher Pearce et al · BMJ Publishing Group · 2026

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Introduction Access to safe, high quality, acceptable and sustainable general practice (GP) and primary care services is essential to improved health outcomes and quality of life for people living in residential aged care homes (RACH). There are, however, critically low levels of service availability and a decline in GPs providing RACH services globally, suggesting there is an urgent need for safe and effective models of care. Telehealth, delivered as part of a holistic model of care, offers a solution to address this gap but comprehensive, person-centred research is needed to directly assess its effect on safety and quality of care in RACH settings.Objectives This collaborative 4-year project (General practice and Residential Aged CarE: GRACE video-telehealth) will (1) scope current telehealth models of care and their acceptability and person-centredness, including identifying the barriers and enablers experienced by RACH residents, carers, staff, GPs and practice managers; (2) co-design a best-practice model of care with an accompanying suite of digital resources and education materials to improve the uptake of video-telehealth; and (3) implement and evaluate this best-practice model of care.Methods and analysis This is a mixed-methods study of residents, carers, RACH staff, GPs and their practice teams that will be conducted across New South Wales, Australia. This protocol describes a staged approach across three phases. In Phase 1, we will collect baseline measures of the frequency of telehealth use in GP practices and RACHs, clinical outcomes (eg, hospitalisations), questionnaires to measure person-centred care, satisfaction and usability of telehealth and qualitative observations and semi-structured interviews. In Phase 2, we will conduct workshops to co-design an intervention that will include developing a model of care to support person-centred video-telehealth, with an accompanying online hub of resources and educational materials to facilitate and support its utilisation. In Phase 3, we will implement and evaluate the intervention. Data will be analysed statistically and thematically and synthesised.Ethics and dissemination Ethics approval has been obtained from the University of Sydney Human Research Ethics Committee (2025/000340) (human.ethics@sydney.edu.au). Prior informed written consent will be obtained from all research participants. Findings from each phase of the study will be submitted for peer-reviewed publication. Project outputs will be disseminated for implementation more widely across New South Wales and Australia.

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APA 7

al, C. P. E. (2026). The GRACE video-telehealth project protocol: a mixed-methods study to improve quality, safety and acceptability of video-telehealth in Australian general practice and residential aged care. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2025-110642

MLA

al, Christopher Pearce et. "The GRACE video-telehealth project protocol: a mixed-methods study to improve quality, safety and acceptability of video-telehealth in Australian general practice and residential aged care." 2026. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2025-110642.

Chicago

al, Christopher Pearce et. 2026. "The GRACE video-telehealth project protocol: a mixed-methods study to improve quality, safety and acceptability of video-telehealth in Australian general practice and residential aged care.". https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2025-110642.

Harvard

al, C. P. E. 2026, The GRACE video-telehealth project protocol: a mixed-methods study to improve quality, safety and acceptability of video-telehealth in Australian general practice and residential aged care, BMJ Publishing Group, available at: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2025-110642 [Accessed 29 Jun. 2026].

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Título
The GRACE video-telehealth project protocol: a mixed-methods study to improve quality, safety and acceptability of video-telehealth in Australian general practice and residential aged care
Autor / colaboradores
Christopher Pearce et al
Editorial
BMJ Publishing Group
Año de publicación
2026
ISSN
2044-6055
ISSN
2044-6055
Idioma
eng
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