Haddad Alexander F, Burke John F, Mummaneni Praveen V, Chan Andrew K, Safaee Michael M, Knightly John J, Mayer Rory R, Pennicooke Brenton H, Digiorgio Anthony M, Weinstein Philip R, Clark Aaron J, Chou Dean, Dhall Sanjay S
Department of Neurological Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Atlantic Neurosurgical Specialists, Morristown, NJ, USA.
Neurospine. 2021 Jun;18(2):292-302. doi: 10.14245/ns.2040684.342. Epub 2021 Jun 30.
The use of telemedicine has dramatically increased due to the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic. Many neurosurgeons are now using telemedicine technologies for preoperative evaluations and routine outpatient visits. Our goal was to standardize the telemedicine motor neurologic examination, summarize the evidence surrounding clinical use of telehealth technologies, and discuss financial and legal considerations.
We identified a 12-member panel composed of spine surgeons, fellows, and senior residents at a single institution. We created an initial telehealth strength examination protocol based on published data and developed 10 agree/disagree statements summarizing the protocol. A blinded Delphi method was utilized to build consensus for each statement, defined as > 80% agreement and no significant disagreement using a 2-way binomial test (significance threshold of p < 0.05). Any statement that did not meet consensus was edited and iteratively resubmitted to the panel until consensus was achieved. In the final round, the panel was unblinded and the protocol was finalized.
After the first round, 4/10 statements failed to meet consensus ( < 80% agreement, and p = 0.031, p = 0.031, p = 0.003, and p = 0.031 statistical disagreement, respectively). The disagreement pertained to grading of strength of the upper (3/10 statements) and lower extremities (1/10 statement). The amended statements clarified strength grading, achieved consensus ( > 80% agreement, p > 0.05 disagreement), and were used to create the final telehealth strength examination protocol.
The resulting protocol was used in our clinic to standardize the telehealth strength examination. This protocol, as well as our summary of telehealth clinical practice, should aid neurosurgical clinics in integrating telemedicine modalities into their practice.
由于2019年冠状病毒病大流行,远程医疗的使用急剧增加。现在许多神经外科医生正在使用远程医疗技术进行术前评估和常规门诊就诊。我们的目标是规范远程医疗运动神经学检查,总结围绕远程健康技术临床应用的证据,并讨论财务和法律方面的考虑因素。
我们确定了一个由单一机构的脊柱外科医生、研究员和高级住院医师组成的12人小组。我们根据已发表的数据创建了一个初始远程健康力量检查方案,并制定了10条同意/不同意声明来总结该方案。采用盲法德尔菲法就每条声明达成共识,共识定义为使用双向二项式检验达成>80%的同意且无显著分歧(显著性阈值p<0.05)。任何未达成共识的声明都进行编辑并反复提交给小组,直到达成共识。在最后一轮中,小组不再处于盲态,方案最终确定。
第一轮后,10条声明中有4条未达成共识(同意率<80%,p分别为0.031、0.031、0.003和0.031,存在统计学分歧)。分歧涉及上肢(10条声明中的3条)和下肢(10条声明中的1条)力量分级。修改后的声明明确了力量分级,达成了共识(同意率>80%,p>0.05无分歧),并用于创建最终的远程健康力量检查方案。
最终方案在我们的诊所用于规范远程健康力量检查。该方案以及我们对远程健康临床实践的总结,应有助于神经外科诊所将远程医疗模式纳入其实践。