Lau Brian C, Wittstein Jocelyn R, Anakwenze Oke A
Duke Sport Science Institute; Department of Orthopaedics, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Orthop J Sports Med. 2021 Mar 3;9(3):2325967121990929. doi: 10.1177/2325967121990929. eCollection 2021 Mar.
The COVID-19 pandemic has changed the practice of orthopaedic sports medicine. The threat of COVID-19 persists, and future restrictions to elective procedures are possible. It is important to understand how sports surgeons are prioritizing surgical cases during elective case restrictions and how telehealth is being incorporated into practice.
To understand how orthopaedic sports surgeons have triaged surgical sports cases and how telehealth is being utilized in response to COVID-19.
Cross-sectional study.
A survey was presented to participants of the American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine (AOSSM) webinar "Handling Sports and COVID-19" and distributed through email to all members of the AOSSM. The survey consisted of 25 questions with 3 sections: demographics, clinical practice, and telehealth. Descriptive statistics were performed.
Overall, 104 respondents participated. Respondents varied with respect to their location, type of clinical practice, and years in practice. The cases with the highest priority during triage included infections, fractures, and traumatic tendon ruptures (eg, quadriceps tendon). Before COVID-19, <14.0% of surgeons used telehealth, and 76.7% had never used telehealth. Now, however, 81.4% of respondents plan to use telehealth at least once a week in their practice. Respondents indicated postoperative visits and return patients as the most appropriate for telehealth. The majority felt that telehealth was not appropriate for new shoulder (65.9%) or knee (55.6%) evaluation. The leading barriers to telehealth use that were identified included, in decreasing order, concerns about clinical appropriateness, accuracy of physical examination, billing/reimbursement, and medicolegal concerns.
Telehealth has seen rapid adoption during the COVID-19 pandemic, and the majority of respondents plan to continue using it. It is being used more for established patients rather than new patient visits. For surgical cases, there was a clear triage priority of sports medicine cases, including infections, fractures, and traumatic tendon ruptures. Lower extremity cases had higher priority than upper extremity.
2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行改变了骨科运动医学的实践方式。COVID-19的威胁依然存在,未来有可能对择期手术进行限制。了解运动外科医生在择期手术受限期间如何对手术病例进行优先级排序以及远程医疗如何融入实践非常重要。
了解骨科运动外科医生如何对运动手术病例进行分类,以及如何利用远程医疗应对COVID-19。
横断面研究。
向美国运动医学骨科协会(AOSSM)网络研讨会“应对运动与COVID-19”的参与者发放调查问卷,并通过电子邮件分发给AOSSM的所有成员。该调查问卷包含25个问题,分为3个部分:人口统计学、临床实践和远程医疗。进行了描述性统计分析。
共有104名受访者参与。受访者在所在地点、临床实践类型和从业年限方面存在差异。分类过程中优先级最高的病例包括感染、骨折和外伤性肌腱断裂(如股四头肌肌腱断裂)。在COVID-19之前,不到14.0%的外科医生使用过远程医疗,76.7%的医生从未使用过远程医疗。然而现在,81.4%的受访者计划在其临床实践中每周至少使用一次远程医疗。受访者指出术后随访和复诊患者最适合采用远程医疗。大多数人认为远程医疗不适用于初次肩关节(65.9%)或膝关节(55.6%)评估。确定的使用远程医疗的主要障碍按降序排列包括对临床适用性的担忧、体格检查的准确性、计费/报销以及法医学问题。
在COVID-19大流行期间,远程医疗得到了迅速采用,大多数受访者计划继续使用。它更多地用于复诊患者而非初次就诊患者。对于手术病例,运动医学病例有明确的分类优先级,包括感染、骨折和外伤性肌腱断裂。下肢病例的优先级高于上肢病例。