Wongworawat Montri D, Capistrant Gary, Stephenson John M
1Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, California 2American Telemedicine Association, Washington, DC 3Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, Arkansas.
J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2017 Sep 6;99(17):e93. doi: 10.2106/JBJS.16.01095.
Telehealth is a way to provide health-care services to a patient from a provider who is at another location. The most common methods include a live interactive visit with the patient, interpretation of imaging, and monitoring of patient progress. Principally, telehealth is a way of providing a service rather than a type of service. It is about patient care, not data care.Examples of orthopaedic applications include conducting patient examinations, interpreting imaging studies, and providing postoperative care. Teleconsultation has been shown to be cost-effective. Other examples in orthopaedic research include the application of telemedicine when measuring patient-reported outcomes. Especially in cases when the patient lives far away from the provider, telehealth reduces time, produces good patient satisfaction, and costs less than hands-on care. As in everyday life, consumers have learned to demand convenience, ease of use, choice, control, and direct access. The ubiquity of telecommunications, combined with consumer technology savviness, drives the demand for telehealth. Unfortunately, the nation's largest payer for health services is one of the most restrictive for telehealth coverage. Medicare's restrictions are mostly the work of the U.S. Congress under Part B law. Video visits are very narrowly covered. Another major policy barrier is that interstate telehealth requires multiple state licenses for the physician, who must be licensed in the jurisdiction of each patient as well as the provider's physical locations. As Medicare shifts toward capitated payment and other value-based methods, there are opportunities to remove such restrictions.Despite these challenges, some states have been proactive in implementing telehealth systems. Arkansas is one of these states, and being a rural state with 2 main population centers, specialty care is relatively sparse. Implemented in 2014, the hand trauma program has been a partnership between the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) and the Arkansas Trauma Communications Center (ATCC). This program has been very successful in decreasing the rate of hand trauma transfer, allowing patients to be treated closer to home while having coordinated access to fellowship-trained hand surgeons when necessary.More widespread innovation of orthopaedic applications for telehealth requires physician buy-in and health-systems partnerships. The regulatory environment will need streamlining. Ultimately, consumer demand will drive the implementation of technology to make care more accessible, convenient, and cost-effective.
远程医疗是一种由身处异地的医疗服务提供者为患者提供医疗保健服务的方式。最常见的方法包括与患者进行实时互动问诊、解读影像以及监测患者病情进展。从本质上讲,远程医疗是一种提供服务的方式,而非一种服务类型。它关乎患者护理,而非数据处理。骨科应用的例子包括进行患者检查、解读影像研究以及提供术后护理。远程会诊已被证明具有成本效益。骨科研究中的其他例子包括在测量患者报告的结果时应用远程医疗。特别是当患者居住在远离医疗服务提供者的地方时,远程医疗节省时间,能让患者满意度良好,且成本低于亲自护理。就像在日常生活中一样,消费者已经学会要求便利、易用性、选择权、控制权和直接获取服务。电信的普及,再加上消费者对技术的精通,推动了对远程医疗的需求。不幸的是,美国最大的医疗服务支付方是对远程医疗覆盖限制最严格的支付方之一。医疗保险的限制主要是美国国会根据B部分法律造成的。视频问诊的覆盖范围非常狭窄。另一个主要的政策障碍是,跨州远程医疗要求医生拥有多个州的执照,医生必须在每个患者所在辖区以及医疗服务提供者实际所在地都获得执照。随着医疗保险转向按人头付费和其他基于价值的支付方式,存在消除此类限制的机会。
尽管存在这些挑战,但一些州已积极主动地实施远程医疗系统。阿肯色州就是其中之一,作为一个农村州,有两个主要人口中心,专科护理相对稀少。手部创伤项目于2014年实施,是阿肯色大学医学科学分校(UAMS)和阿肯色创伤通信中心(ATCC)之间的合作项目。该项目在降低手部创伤转诊率方面非常成功,使患者能够在离家更近的地方接受治疗,同时在必要时能协调获得经过专科培训的手外科医生的治疗。
远程医疗在骨科应用方面更广泛的创新需要医生的支持和医疗系统的合作。监管环境需要简化。最终,消费者需求将推动技术的实施,以使医疗服务更易获取、更便捷且更具成本效益。