James Justin G, Wechsler Lawrence R, Blum Christina A, Bae Charles J, Tropea Thomas F
Department of Neurology, University of Pennsylvania.
Neurol Clin Pract. 2024 Jun;14(3):e200296. doi: 10.1212/CPJ.0000000000200296. Epub 2024 Apr 18.
Teleneurology usage has increased during the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 pandemic. However, studies evaluating physician impressions of inpatient teleneurology are limited. We implemented a quality improvement initiative to evaluate neurologists' impression following individual inpatient teleneurology consultation at a satellite hospital of a large academic center with no in-person neurology coverage.
A REDCap survey link was embedded within templates used by neurologists for documentation of inpatient consultations to be completed immediately after encounters. All teleneurology encounters with completed surveys at a single satellite hospital of the University of Pennsylvania Health System Neurology Department between May 10, 2021, and August 14, 2022, were included. Individual patient-level and encounter-level data were extracted from the medical record.
A total of 374 surveys (response rate of 54.05%) were completed by 19 neurologists; 341 questionnaires were included in the analysis. Seven neurologists who specialized as neurohospitalists completed 231 surveys (67.74% of total surveys completed), while 12 non-neurohospitalists completed 110 (32.36%). The history obtained was rated as worse (14%) or the same (86%) as an in-person consult; none reported the history as better than nonteleneurology encounters. The physician-patient relationship was poor or fair in 25% of the encounters and good or excellent in 75% of visits. The overall experience was judged to be worse than in-person consultation in 32% of encounters, the same in 66%, and better in 2%. Fifty-one percent of providers responded that there were elements of the neurologic examination that might have changed their assessment and plan of care if performed in-person. Encounters with peripheral or neuromuscular-related chief complaints had the most inadequate examinations and worse overall experiences, while the most positive impressions of these clinical experiences were observed among seizure-related chief complaints.
Determining best practices for inpatient teleneurology should consider the patient chief complaint to use teleneurology in scenarios with the highest likelihood of a positive experience. Further efforts should be made to the patient experience and to improve the remote examination to enhance the applicability of teleneurology to the full spectrum of inpatient neurologic consultations.
在严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2大流行期间,远程神经病学的使用有所增加。然而,评估医生对住院患者远程神经病学印象的研究有限。我们实施了一项质量改进计划,以评估在一家大型学术中心的卫星医院进行的住院患者远程神经病学个体会诊后神经科医生的印象,该卫星医院没有现场神经科服务。
一个REDCap调查链接嵌入到神经科医生用于记录住院会诊的模板中,要求在会诊结束后立即完成。纳入了2021年5月10日至2022年8月14日期间宾夕法尼亚大学医疗系统神经科单一卫星医院所有完成调查的远程神经病学会诊。从病历中提取个体患者层面和会诊层面的数据。
19名神经科医生共完成了374份调查问卷(回复率为54.05%);分析纳入了341份问卷。7名专门从事神经住院医师工作的神经科医生完成了231份调查问卷(占完成问卷总数的67.74%),而12名非神经住院医师完成了110份(32.36%)。所获得的病史被评为比面对面会诊差(14%)或相同(86%);没有人报告病史比非远程神经病学会诊更好。在25%的会诊中,医患关系较差或一般,在75%的就诊中良好或优秀。在32%的会诊中,总体体验被判定比面对面会诊差,66%相同,2%更好。51%的提供者表示,如果进行面对面检查,神经系统检查的某些方面可能会改变他们的评估和护理计划。以外周或神经肌肉相关主诉进行的会诊检查最不完善,总体体验最差,而在癫痫相关主诉中观察到对这些临床体验的最积极印象。
确定住院患者远程神经病学的最佳实践应考虑患者主诉,以便在最有可能获得积极体验的情况下使用远程神经病学。应进一步努力改善患者体验并改进远程检查,以提高远程神经病学在整个住院患者神经系统会诊中的适用性。