Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.
Division of Hematology/Oncology, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan Rogel Cancer Center, Ann Arbor, MI.
JCO Oncol Pract. 2021 Sep;17(9):e1362-e1374. doi: 10.1200/OP.21.00317. Epub 2021 Aug 18.
There was rapid adoption of teleoncology care in the Veterans Health Administration during the COVID-19 pandemic. One third of 9 million Veterans Health Administration enrolled Veterans live in rural areas. Although digital solutions can expand capacity, enhance care access, and reduce financial burden, they may also exacerbate rural-urban health disparities. Careful evaluation of patients' perceptions and policy tradeoffs are necessary to optimize teleoncology postpandemic.
Patients with ≥ 1 teleoncology visit with medical, surgical, or radiation oncology between March 2020 and June 2020 were identified retrospectively. Validated, Likert-type survey assessing patient satisfaction was developed. Follow-up survey was conducted on patients with ≥ 1 teleoncology visit from August 2020 to January 2021. Travel distance, time, cost, and carbon dioxide emissions were calculated based on zip codes.
A hundred surveys were completed (response rate, 62%). Patients overall were satisfied with teleoncology (83% Agree or Strongly Agree) but felt less satisfied than in-person visits (47% Agree or Strongly Agree). Audiovisual component improved patient perception of involvement in care, ability to self-manage health or medical needs, and comparability to in-person visits. Follow-up survey demonstrated similar satisfaction. Total travel-related savings are as follows: 86,470 miles, 84,374 minutes, $49,720 US dollars, and 35.5 metric tons of carbon dioxide.
Veterans are broadly satisfied with teleoncology. Audiovisual capabilities are critical to satisfaction. This is challenging for rural populations with lack of technology access. Patients experienced financial and time savings, and society benefitted from reduced carbon emissions. Continued optimization is needed to enhance patient experience and address secondary effects.
在 COVID-19 大流行期间,退伍军人健康管理局(Veterans Health Administration,VHA)迅速采用远程肿瘤学护理。在 VHA 登记的 900 万退伍军人中,有三分之一居住在农村地区。虽然数字解决方案可以扩大服务能力、增强医疗服务可及性并减轻经济负担,但也可能加剧城乡健康差距。有必要仔细评估患者的认知和政策权衡,以优化大流行后的远程肿瘤学。
本研究回顾性地确定了 2020 年 3 月至 2020 年 6 月期间至少有 1 次远程肿瘤学就诊的医疗、外科或放射肿瘤学患者。开发了一种经过验证的、李克特量表式的患者满意度评估调查。从 2020 年 8 月至 2021 年 1 月,对至少有 1 次远程肿瘤学就诊的患者进行了后续调查。根据邮政编码计算旅行距离、时间、费用和二氧化碳排放量。
完成了 100 份调查问卷(应答率为 62%)。总体而言,患者对远程肿瘤学感到满意(83%表示同意或强烈同意),但比面对面就诊的满意度低(47%表示同意或强烈同意)。视听组件改善了患者对参与护理的感知、自我管理健康或医疗需求的能力以及与面对面就诊的可比性。后续调查显示出相似的满意度。总的旅行相关节省如下:86470 英里、84374 分钟、49720 美元和 35.5 公吨二氧化碳。
退伍军人对远程肿瘤学普遍满意。视听功能对满意度至关重要,但对于缺乏技术获取能力的农村人群来说具有挑战性。患者体验到了经济和时间上的节省,社会也从减少的碳排放中受益。需要进一步优化,以增强患者体验并解决次要影响。