Moreau Maxim, Paré Guy
HEC Montréal, 3000 Chemin de la Côte-Ste-Catherine, Montréal, Québec H3T 2A7 Canada.
Pilot Feasibility Stud. 2020 Jul 4;6:93. doi: 10.1186/s40814-020-00637-7. eCollection 2020.
Emergency physicians are responsible for assessing the severity of a patient's burns, which determines whether the patient needs to be transferred to a burn center. Such a proper assessment represents a daunting task because severe burn injuries are rare. Inaccurate estimates often result in unjustified and costly transfers and unneeded fluid resuscitation and assisted ventilation procedures. Telemedicine offers a solution to these challenges. The present pilot study aims to investigate the feasibility, acceptability, and potential value of a large telemedicine initiative at the University of Montreal Health Center's burn center and its network of referring hospitals.
A three-stage study protocol is proposed to achieve this objective. First, a proof of concept phase will assess the technical feasibility of telemedicine at one referring hospital with a high volume of patient transfers. Second, the organizational and human feasibility of the project will be evaluated in four referring medical centers. All teleconsultation sessions will be analyzed using the WHO's telemedicine implementation model. The third phase will consist of evaluating the potential impacts of telemedicine in a subset of 10 referring hospitals. The quality of communications between referring physicians and specialists will be assessed using semi-structured interviews. A pre-test/post-test with a comparison group design will be used to assess the effects of telemedicine on patient transfers, ventilation procedures, patient complications, mortality, length of ICU stay, and additional surgical procedures. The economic viability of telemedicine will be assessed using a cost-minimization approach.
The telemedicine initiative is expected to yield positive and significant outcomes that are relevant to a wide range of medical centers that already use or are considering using a similar technology. The contribution of this pilot study lies in its ability to reveal technological, organizational, and human barriers and provide a preliminary assessment of the clinical and economic value of a large-scale telemedicine initiative in the context of burn medicine.
急诊医生负责评估患者烧伤的严重程度,这决定了患者是否需要转至烧伤中心。进行这样恰当的评估是一项艰巨的任务,因为严重烧伤病例很少见。不准确的评估往往导致不合理且代价高昂的转院,以及不必要的液体复苏和辅助通气程序。远程医疗为这些挑战提供了一个解决方案。本试点研究旨在调查蒙特利尔大学健康中心烧伤中心及其转诊医院网络开展大型远程医疗项目的可行性、可接受性和潜在价值。
为实现这一目标,提出了一个三阶段研究方案。首先,概念验证阶段将在一家患者转诊量大的转诊医院评估远程医疗的技术可行性。其次,将在四个转诊医疗中心评估该项目的组织和人员可行性。所有远程会诊均使用世界卫生组织的远程医疗实施模式进行分析。第三阶段将包括评估远程医疗在10家转诊医院中的潜在影响。将通过半结构化访谈评估转诊医生与专科医生之间的沟通质量。将采用带有对照组设计的前测/后测来评估远程医疗对患者转院、通气程序、患者并发症、死亡率、重症监护病房住院时长和额外外科手术的影响。将采用成本最小化方法评估远程医疗的经济可行性。
预计该远程医疗项目将产生积极且显著的成果,这些成果与众多已使用或正在考虑使用类似技术的医疗中心相关。本试点研究的贡献在于其能够揭示技术、组织和人员方面的障碍,并在烧伤医学背景下对大型远程医疗项目的临床和经济价值进行初步评估。