Cape Winelands District, Western Cape Government Health, South Africa.
S Afr Med J. 2022 Feb 1;112(2):13504.
In the context of a shortage of medical specialists, a medical referral app, designed for use on smartphones, was launched in 2014 for use by doctors in the public health service in South Africa.
As this is a novel intervention, with potential to have an impact on the use of scarce resources, and because not much was known about the use of the app, a descriptive study was undertaken to assess its adoption in Western Cape Government Health (WCGH) facilities.
Usage data of the app in WCGH facilities, in terms of referral and user numbers, were obtained from the date of its introduction in 2014. In addition, all the referrals to WCGH facilities for July 2019, stripped of any identifying data of patients or doctors, were analysed for origin, destination, outcome and response times. Descriptive statistics were used to analyse the data.
Use of the app grew rapidly from 40 referrals per quarter to 16 437 per quarter after 5 years in use, with a cumulative total of 95 381 referrals. In July 2019, active users of the system included 913 sending doctors and 298 receiving doctors, representing 20 medical specialties. The senders and receivers were representative of every level in the healthcare system, from clinic to tertiary hospital. In July 2019, a total of 5 941 referrals were sent by means of the app to public facilities in Western Cape Province. Of the referrals, 80% were classified as acute and 20% as non-urgent. The referral outcomes included 51% accepted for transfer, 19% accepted for a specialist appointment, and 13% concluded with advice alone without the need for a specialist appointment or patient transfer - this category accounted for 28% of non-urgent referrals and 9% of acute referrals. In 50% of referrals, advice was given to the referring doctor, either as an additional or the only outcome. The median response times were 9 minutes for acute referrals and 19 minutes for non-urgent referrals.
This study documents the scale-up of a mobile phone consultation and referral app from pilot phase to significant growth in use across a resource-constrained healthcare system. In a large proportion of cases, advice was given to the referring doctor by means of the app, frequently obviating the need for a specialist appointment or patient transfer. This finding demonstrates that a mobile app has the potential to reduce the need for face-to-face specialist visits, thereby improving the use of scarce medical resources.
在医疗专家短缺的情况下,一款专为南非公共卫生服务医生设计的智能手机医疗转诊应用程序于 2014 年推出。
由于这是一种新的干预措施,有可能影响稀缺资源的使用,而且由于人们对该应用程序的使用知之甚少,因此进行了一项描述性研究,以评估其在西开普省政府卫生部门的采用情况。
从 2014 年推出之日起,获取该应用程序在西开普省政府卫生部门的转诊和用户数量使用数据。此外,还对 2019 年 7 月所有转诊到西开普省政府卫生部门的转诊进行了分析,这些转诊不包含任何患者或医生的身份识别数据,分析其来源、目的地、结果和响应时间。使用描述性统计数据对数据进行分析。
该应用程序的使用从每季度 40 次转诊迅速增长到使用 5 年后的每季度 16 437 次转诊,累计转诊 95 381 次。2019 年 7 月,系统的活跃用户包括 913 名发送医生和 298 名接收医生,代表 20 个医学专业。发送者和接收者代表医疗保健系统的各个层级,从诊所到三级医院。2019 年 7 月,通过该应用程序共向西开普省的公共设施发送了 5 941 次转诊。在这些转诊中,80%被归类为急性,20%为非紧急。转诊结果包括 51%接受转诊,19%接受专科预约,13%仅通过建议得出结论,无需专科预约或患者转诊——这一类别占非紧急转诊的 28%和急性转诊的 9%。在 50%的转诊中,向转诊医生提供了建议,这是额外的或唯一的结果。急性转诊的中位数响应时间为 9 分钟,非紧急转诊的中位数响应时间为 19 分钟。
本研究记录了从试点阶段到资源受限的医疗保健系统中使用量显著增长的移动电话咨询和转诊应用程序的扩展情况。在很大比例的情况下,通过该应用程序向转诊医生提供了建议,这经常避免了专科预约或患者转诊的需要。这一发现表明,移动应用程序有可能减少对面对面专科就诊的需求,从而改善稀缺医疗资源的利用。