O'Sullivan Belinda, Rann Helena, McGrail Matthew
Monash University School of Rural Health, Office of Research, PO Box 666, Level 3, 26 Mercy St, Bendigo, Vic. 3550, Australia
Monash University School of Rural Health, Northways Road, Churchill, Vic. 3842, Australia
Rural Remote Health. 2019 Mar;19(1):4544. doi: 10.22605/RRH4544. Epub 2019 Mar 29.
In Australia, about one in five medical specialist doctors travel away from their main practice to provide regular outreach services in rural communities. A consistent policy question is whether video consultations (VC) are used as part of rural outreach service provision and the degree to which they partly or wholly substitute outreach visits. This study aimed to explore how commonly specialists providing rural outreach services also use VC to provide clinical service at the outreach site, the aspects of outreach clinical services they consider suitable for VC delivery, whether VC use reduces outreach travel frequency and, if used, has the potential to improve the sustainability of outreach.
The study involved 390 specialists in Victoria being invited to participate in an online survey between December 2016 and March 2017. Invited specialists were those travelling to provide rural outreach services in areas of need, already subsidised by the Australian government's outreach policy. Analysis included basic frequency counts and proportions and Pearson χ2 tests for associations. Qualitative free text responses were analysed and grouped thematically.
Of 65 respondents, who were travelling to provide rural outreach services on average 11 times per year, 57% (95% confidence interval (CI) 44-69%) used VC to provide aspects of clinical services to the outreach site. They used VC for a median of 12 sessions per year, mainly for one patient per session. VC was used for non-complicated health care, to support rural GPs, undertake clinical reviews or see urgent new patients expediently. Key restrictions were the inability to conduct physical examinations and complex assessments. VC reduced the frequency of outreach travel for 50% of those using it (95%CI 29-63%) although 43% (95%CI 27-61%) reported that providing outreach clinical services via VC took more time than providing face-to-face consultations. Use was not associated with increased intention to continue rural outreach services for 5 or more years (56% v 62%; p=0.70) Conclusion: More than half of specialist doctors complemented their rural outreach services with VC. However, VC was used infrequently, mainly for one patient per session, for restricted clinical scenarios. Although VC use reduced outreach travel frequency for half of providers, 43% responded that VC takes more time than face-to-face clinical service provision. In conclusion, VC is a potentially useful adjunct to outreach service models, but it is unlikely to replace the utility of face-to-face rural specialist services, particularly for complex care, and may not influence outreach service sustainability in the manner in which it is currently used.
在澳大利亚,约五分之一的专科医生会离开其主要执业地点,前往农村社区提供定期外展服务。一个一直存在的政策问题是,视频会诊(VC)是否被用作农村外展服务提供的一部分,以及其在多大程度上部分或完全替代了外展出诊。本研究旨在探讨提供农村外展服务的专科医生使用VC在服务地点提供临床服务的普遍程度、他们认为适合通过VC提供的外展临床服务方面、使用VC是否降低了外展出诊频率,以及如果使用,是否有可能提高外展服务的可持续性。
该研究邀请了维多利亚州的390名专科医生在2016年12月至2017年3月期间参与一项在线调查。受邀专科医生是那些前往澳大利亚政府外展政策已提供补贴的贫困地区提供农村外展服务的人员。分析包括基本频数计数和比例以及用于关联性分析的Pearson卡方检验。对定性的自由文本回复进行分析并按主题分组。
在平均每年前往提供农村外展服务11次的65名受访者中,57%(95%置信区间(CI)44 - 69%)使用VC在服务地点提供部分临床服务。他们每年使用VC的中位数为12次会诊,每次会诊主要针对一名患者。VC用于非复杂的医疗保健、支持农村全科医生、进行临床评估或便捷地诊治紧急新患者。主要限制是无法进行体格检查和复杂评估。VC使50%的使用者(95%CI 29 - 63%)减少了外展出诊频率,尽管43%(95%CI 27 - 61%)报告称通过VC提供外展临床服务比面对面会诊花费更多时间。使用VC与继续提供5年或更长时间农村外展服务的意愿增加无关(56%对62%;p = 0.70)结论:超过一半的专科医生通过VC补充其农村外展服务。然而,VC使用频率较低,每次会诊主要针对一名患者,且临床场景受限。尽管VC使用使一半的提供者减少了外展出诊频率,但43%的人回复称VC比面对面临床服务花费更多时间。总之,VC对外展服务模式可能是一种有用的辅助手段,但不太可能取代面对面农村专科服务的效用,特别是对于复杂护理,并且可能不会以目前使用的方式影响外展服务的可持续性。