Long Richard, Heffernan Courtney, Gao Zhiwei, Egedahl Mary Lou, Talbot James
Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, Department of Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
School of Public Health, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
PLoS One. 2015 Dec 23;10(12):e0144784. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0144784. eCollection 2015.
Meeting the challenge of tuberculosis (TB) elimination will require adopting new models of delivering patient-centered care customized to diverse settings and contexts. In areas of low incidence with cases spread out across jurisdictions and large geographic areas, a "virtual" model is attractive. However, whether "virtual" clinics and telemedicine deliver the same outcomes as face-to-face encounters in general and within the sphere of public health in particular, is unknown. This evidence is generated here by analyzing outcomes between the "virtual" and "outpatient" public health TB clinics in Alberta, a province of Western Canada with a large geographic area and relatively small population.
In response to the challenge of delivering equitable TB services over long distances and to hard to reach communities, Alberta established three public health clinics for the delivery of its program: two outpatient serving major metropolitan areas, and one virtual serving mainly rural areas. The virtual clinic receives paper-based or electronic referrals and generates directives which are acted upon by local providers. Clinics are staffed by dedicated public health nurses and university-based TB physicians. Performance of the two types of clinics is compared between the years 2008 and 2012 using 16 case management and treatment outcome indicators and 12 contact management indicators.
In the outpatient and virtual clinics, respectively, 691 and 150 cases and their contacts were managed. Individually and together both types of clinics met most performance targets. Compared to outpatient clinics, virtual clinic performance was comparable, superior and inferior in 22, 3, and 3 indicators, respectively.
Outpatient and virtual public health TB clinics perform equally well. In low incidence settings a combination of the two clinic types has the potential to address issues around equitable service delivery and declining expertise.
应对消除结核病(TB)的挑战需要采用新的模式,提供针对不同环境和背景量身定制的以患者为中心的护理。在发病率较低且病例分散在不同司法管辖区和广大地理区域的地区,“虚拟”模式颇具吸引力。然而,“虚拟”诊所和远程医疗能否产生与一般面对面诊疗,尤其是在公共卫生领域相同的效果,尚不清楚。本文通过分析加拿大西部面积广大且人口相对较少的艾伯塔省“虚拟”和“门诊”公共卫生结核病诊所的诊疗结果来获取这方面的证据。
为应对长距离提供公平的结核病服务以及服务难以到达的社区这一挑战,艾伯塔省设立了三个公共卫生诊所来实施其项目:两个门诊诊所服务于主要大都市地区,一个虚拟诊所主要服务农村地区。虚拟诊所接收纸质或电子转诊,并生成由当地医疗服务提供者执行的指令。诊所配备了专业的公共卫生护士和大学结核病医生。使用16个病例管理和治疗结果指标以及12个接触者管理指标,对2008年至2012年期间这两种类型诊所的表现进行比较。
门诊诊所和虚拟诊所分别管理了691例和150例病例及其接触者。两种类型的诊所各自以及总体上都达到了大多数绩效目标。与门诊诊所相比,虚拟诊所的表现分别在22个、3个和3个指标上相当、更优和更差。
门诊和虚拟公共卫生结核病诊所表现同样出色。在低发病率地区,这两种诊所类型相结合有可能解决公平服务提供和专业知识下降等问题。