Yih Christopher, Chokshi Krupali, Kyriakides Christopher, Seko Kyle, Wahezi Sayed, Shaparin Naum, Vydyanathan Amaresh, Gallardo Jean Carlo, Morrow Lisa, Sperber Kevin, Hascalovici Jacob R
Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, NYU Grossman School of Medicine, NYU Langone Health, New York, NY.
Multidisciplinary Pain Program, Montefiore Medical Center, Bronx, NY; The Arthur S. Abramson Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Montefiore Medical Center and Hospital, Bronx, NY.
Pain Physician. 2022 Mar;25(2):209-219.
Chronic pain is a leading cause of disease burden and disability globally. The COVID-19 pandemic catalyzed a major paradigm shift in health care delivery with the universal adoption of telemedicine. Telehealth physical examination is particularly challenging and little guidance is available on this topic.
We attempt to describe the Point To the Area of Pain (PTAP) test and establish a consensus regarding its utility for musculoskeletal examination (MSK) via telehealth.
The authors drafted an online survey.
The survey was sent to physicians and nurse practitioners within the authors' respective departments and institutions who routinely use telemedicine to treat pain METHODS: Respondents (n = 61) were asked about their primary specialty, comfort level in evaluating patients in pain, use of the PTAP test and its perceived clinical relevance to patient management, and other relevant questions.
Respondents were predominantly trained in Physiatry (47.5%), Anesthesiology (23%), Neurology (13.1%) and Family Medicine (11.5%); 67.2% of providers treat pain related diseases > 75% of the time; 50.8% of respondents were "somewhat comfortable" at performing a virtual MSK exam and 29.5% were "not comfortable"; 65.5% utilize the PTAP test and 88.5% agree or strongly agree that this test provides extrinsic clinically relevant information.
The relatively small number of respondents.
PTAP tests should not replace the standard accepted in-person or virtual physical examination in practice, but in the absence of a hands-on exam, the PTAP test is a clear and concise test that can easily be performed in conjunction with other techniques via telehealth, and in the context of assessing pain provides useful clinical information that can help guide medical decision making.
慢性疼痛是全球疾病负担和残疾的主要原因。新冠疫情促使医疗保健服务发生了重大范式转变,远程医疗得到了广泛应用。远程健康体检尤其具有挑战性,关于这一主题的指导意见很少。
我们试图描述指向疼痛区域(PTAP)测试,并就其在远程健康肌肉骨骼检查(MSK)中的效用达成共识。
作者起草了一项在线调查。
该调查发送给了作者所在各部门和机构中经常使用远程医疗治疗疼痛的医生和执业护士。
询问了61名受访者他们的主要专业、评估疼痛患者时的舒适度、PTAP测试的使用情况及其与患者管理的临床相关性,以及其他相关问题。
受访者主要接受过物理医学(47.5%)、麻醉学(23%)、神经病学(13.1%)和家庭医学(11.5%)方面的培训;67.2%的医疗服务提供者治疗疼痛相关疾病的时间超过75%;50.8%的受访者在进行虚拟MSK检查时“有点舒服”,29.5%的受访者“不舒服”;65.5%的人使用PTAP测试,88.5%的人同意或强烈同意该测试提供了外在的临床相关信息。
受访者数量相对较少。
在实践中,PTAP测试不应取代标准的面对面或虚拟体格检查,但在没有实际操作检查的情况下,PTAP测试是一种清晰简洁的测试,可以很容易地通过远程医疗与其他技术结合进行,并且在评估疼痛的背景下提供有用的临床信息,有助于指导医疗决策。