Watanabe Kazuya, Tani Takuaki, Suzuki Atsushi, Kawakami Kei, Watanabe Mami, Yamasaki Kei, Morota Koichi
Department of Physical Therapy, Shimonoseki Nursing and Rehabilitation School, Yamaguchi, JPN.
Department of Psychosomatic Dentistry, Tokyo Medical and Dental University Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences, Tokyo, JPN.
Cureus. 2023 Sep 12;15(9):e45074. doi: 10.7759/cureus.45074. eCollection 2023 Sep.
Backgrounds During the COVID-19 pandemic, visitor restrictions in healthcare settings adversely affected patients. Video calls have emerged as an essential digital alternative that can decrease patients' anxiety and improve satisfaction. This study investigated whether family-initiated video calls could mitigate delirium symptoms and risky behaviors and enhance patients' comprehension of instructions. Methods This observational study used medical chart data and the Diem Payment System from a single acute care hospital in Fukuoka, Japan. The study involved patients hospitalized between May 2020 and August 2021 who used video chat systems. Patients or their relatives used video calls through Skype. The frequency of video chat use served as the primary exposure. Changes in the patients' risky behaviors and instruction comprehension upon discharge were the primary outcomes. Results A total of 532 patients were included in the study, with an average age of over 70 years. After implementing the inverse probability of treatment weighting adjustment, an improved balance across age, sex, BMI categories, and other variables was observed. The effects of video calls on risky behaviors and instruction comprehension varied. Patients with three or more video calls showed distinct effects compared with those with fewer calls. When hospitalization was limited to three weeks, video calls noticeably influenced risky behaviors (p=0.022, 95% CI:1.08-2.63), but not instruction comprehension (p=0.226, 95% CI:0.43-1.22). Conclusions The use of video calls as a visitation method in acute care hospitals during a pandemic suggests that video calls reduce risky behaviors in patients with a three-week stay. This alternative to physical visitations contributes positively to patient safety and supports ongoing efforts to prevent the spread of COVID-19.
背景 在新冠疫情期间,医疗机构的访客限制对患者产生了不利影响。视频通话已成为一种重要的数字替代方式,可减轻患者焦虑并提高满意度。本研究调查了家属发起的视频通话是否能减轻谵妄症状和危险行为,并增强患者对医嘱的理解。方法 这项观察性研究使用了日本福冈一家急性护理医院的病历数据和Diem支付系统。研究对象为2020年5月至2021年8月期间住院并使用视频聊天系统的患者。患者或其亲属通过Skype进行视频通话。视频聊天的使用频率作为主要暴露因素。患者出院时危险行为和医嘱理解的变化为主要结局。结果 共有532名患者纳入研究,平均年龄超过70岁。实施治疗权重逆概率调整后,观察到年龄、性别、BMI类别和其他变量之间的平衡得到改善。视频通话对危险行为和医嘱理解的影响各不相同。与视频通话次数较少的患者相比,进行三次或更多次视频通话的患者有明显不同的效果。当住院时间限制在三周时,视频通话对危险行为有显著影响(p = 0.022,95%CI:1.08 - 2.63),但对医嘱理解没有影响(p = 0.226,95%CI:0.43 - 1.22)。结论 在疫情期间,在急性护理医院将视频通话用作探视方式表明,视频通话可减少住院三周患者的危险行为。这种替代实地探视的方式对患者安全有积极贡献,并有助于持续努力预防新冠病毒传播。