Background <p>Digital transformation in healthcare increasingly depends on the digitalisation of day-to-day clinical work, in particular on professionals’ ability to use electronic health records, telemedicine, and data-driven tools. However, gaps in digital competence and uneven access to training persist across Europe. This study examines how healthcare professionals understand and apply digital tools in clinical practice, and compares perceived barriers between Northern and Southern Europe.</p> Methods <p>We conducted a cross-sectional qualitative survey using a digital self-assessment questionnaire administered to 2,048 healthcare professionals from six European countries. The study was theoretically grounded in the European Digital Competence Framework for Citizens 2.0 (DigComp 2.0) and the eHealth Literacy Framework, and employed thematic analysis to interpret open-ended responses.</p> Results <p>Four key thematic areas emerged: remote patient care and monitoring; digital education and health management; transformation of clinical workflows; and data-driven diagnostics. Professionals in Northern Europe—especially Finland—described integrated digital systems, structured training, and institutional support. Participants in Southern Europe more often reported fragmented infrastructure, limited training opportunities, and organizational resistance. The most frequently cited barriers to digital adoption were lack of training (23%), time constraints (27%), limited resources (24%), and resistance to change (19%).</p> Conclusions <p>Healthcare professionals widely view digital competence as essential for safe and effective care, but uptake is constrained by structural barriers and regional inequalities. Targeted investment in workforce training, protected time for skill development, and foundational digital infrastructure—particularly in Southern Europe and in resource-limited settings—is needed to support equitable digital transformation across European health systems.</p>

错误:搜索内容不能为空,请输入英文关键词
错误:关键词超出字数限制,请精简
高级检索

The imperative of digital competence in healthcare professionals: comparison between the North and South of Europe

  • Marco Esperança,
  • Joao C. Ferreira,
  • Ana Lucia Martins

摘要

Background

Digital transformation in healthcare increasingly depends on the digitalisation of day-to-day clinical work, in particular on professionals’ ability to use electronic health records, telemedicine, and data-driven tools. However, gaps in digital competence and uneven access to training persist across Europe. This study examines how healthcare professionals understand and apply digital tools in clinical practice, and compares perceived barriers between Northern and Southern Europe.

Methods

We conducted a cross-sectional qualitative survey using a digital self-assessment questionnaire administered to 2,048 healthcare professionals from six European countries. The study was theoretically grounded in the European Digital Competence Framework for Citizens 2.0 (DigComp 2.0) and the eHealth Literacy Framework, and employed thematic analysis to interpret open-ended responses.

Results

Four key thematic areas emerged: remote patient care and monitoring; digital education and health management; transformation of clinical workflows; and data-driven diagnostics. Professionals in Northern Europe—especially Finland—described integrated digital systems, structured training, and institutional support. Participants in Southern Europe more often reported fragmented infrastructure, limited training opportunities, and organizational resistance. The most frequently cited barriers to digital adoption were lack of training (23%), time constraints (27%), limited resources (24%), and resistance to change (19%).

Conclusions

Healthcare professionals widely view digital competence as essential for safe and effective care, but uptake is constrained by structural barriers and regional inequalities. Targeted investment in workforce training, protected time for skill development, and foundational digital infrastructure—particularly in Southern Europe and in resource-limited settings—is needed to support equitable digital transformation across European health systems.