Joshi Charuta N, Yang Michele L, Eschbach Krista, Tong Suhong, Jacobson Mona P, Stillman Chelsey, Kropp Annmarie E, Shea Stephanie A, Frunzi Gerard M, Thomas J Fred, Olson Christina A
Division of Pediatric Neurology (CNJ, MLY, KE, MPJ, CS, AEK, SAS), University of Colorado School of Medicine, Anschutz Medical Campus, Children's Hospital Colorado, Aurora; Department of Pediatrics (ST), Children's Hospital Colorado, Aurora; Department of Biostatistics and Informatics (ST), Colorado School of Public Health, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora; Department of Pediatrics (JFT, CAO), University of Colorado School of Medicine, Anschutz Medical Campus, Children's Hospital Colorado, Aurora; and Telehealth Department (GMF, JFT, CAO), Children's Hospital Colorado, Aurora.
Neurol Clin Pract. 2021 Apr;11(2):e73-e82. doi: 10.1212/CPJ.0000000000001025.
To examine whether telemedicine remains safe and of high quality despite rapid expansion of services by comparing telemedicine encounters before and during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Pre-post study investigating 2,999 telemedicine encounters: February 1, 2020-May 15, 2020, was performed. A total of 2,919 completed visits before and after strict social distancing implementation were analyzed for patient and provider characteristics, encounter characteristics (e.g., history and physical examination), and quality and safety metrics (phone calls ≤ 7 days postvisit, visit-cause-specific hospital admission or mortality ≤ 30 days after visit). Stratified analysis of 3 groups for outcomes (young age, neuromuscular diagnosis, and new encounters) was performed.
Patients ranging from 1 month to 33 years of age were seen. Rural patients were less likely to be seen during the pandemic compared with urban patients (8% vs 90%; < 0.0001); teaching clinic and specialty clinic encounters increased significantly during the pandemic (8% vs 3%; = 0.005), and documentation of at least 2 systems on examination was noted significantly more frequently during the pandemic (13% vs 7%; = 0.009). No deaths were reported. There were no differences before/during the pandemic in safety or telemedicine failure metrics within the entire group and high-risk subgroups.
Despite a markedly and rapidly expanded scope of ambulatory telemedicine care during the COVID-19 pandemic, telemedicine remained a safe and high-quality option for pediatric neurology patients. In addition, populations perceived as high risk for telemedicine (the very young, new patients, and those with neuromuscular diagnoses) can benefit from telemedicine visits, particularly when access to in-person care is limited.
通过比较COVID-19大流行之前和期间的远程医疗会诊,研究尽管服务迅速扩展,远程医疗是否仍保持安全和高质量。
进行了一项前后对照研究,调查2999次远程医疗会诊:2020年2月1日至2020年5月15日。对严格实施社交距离措施前后的2919次完整就诊进行了分析,内容包括患者和提供者特征、会诊特征(如病史和体格检查)以及质量和安全指标(就诊后7天内的电话随访、因就诊原因导致的30天内住院或死亡)。对结果进行了三组分层分析(年轻患者、神经肌肉疾病诊断患者和新会诊患者)。
就诊患者年龄范围为1个月至33岁。与城市患者相比,农村患者在大流行期间就诊的可能性较小(8%对90%;P<0.0001);教学诊所和专科诊所的会诊在大流行期间显著增加(8%对3%;P=0.005),大流行期间体格检查中至少记录2个系统的情况显著更频繁(13%对7%;P=0.009)。未报告死亡病例。在整个组和高危亚组中,大流行之前/期间的安全或远程医疗失败指标没有差异。
尽管在COVID-19大流行期间门诊远程医疗护理的范围显著且迅速扩大,但远程医疗仍然是儿科神经科患者安全且高质量的选择。此外,被认为远程医疗高风险人群(非常年幼的患者、新患者以及患有神经肌肉疾病诊断的患者)可以从远程医疗就诊中受益,特别是在面对面就诊受限的情况下。