Literature DB >> 10384677

A telecommunications system to manage patients with chronic disease.

R H Friedman1, J Stollerman, L Rozenblyum, D Belfer, A Selim, D Mahoney, S Steinbach.   

Abstract

The care of patients with chronic disease is a large and growing problem in the United States and other industrialized countries.' it is expensive, and the quality of care received by patients is often sub-optimal, resulting in poor health outcomes. We developed a totally automated computer-controlled telecommunications system, called TLC, that provides--frequent, close monitoring of patients with chronic disease and reports the results to the patients' physicians on a timely basis, so that they can intervene appropriately. TLC also monitors the patients' important self care activities, such as medication-taking, and provides education and counseling to improve the patients' performance of these activities. The system operates through regularly scheduled telephone conversations with patients' in their homes. An evaluation of a TLC chronic disease application for patients with hypertension demonstrated that use of the system was associated with significant improvement of the patients' adherence to their medication regimens and significantly improved blood pressure control. These results show that it is possible to design an information science-based health care delivery system that performs functions usually performed only by health care professionals, and suggests that information science will become an important means of delivering health care services in the next millennium.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 10384677

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stud Health Technol Inform        ISSN: 0926-9630


  8 in total

1.  Design and development of a Telephone-Linked Care (TLC) system to reduce impulsivity among violent forensic outpatients and probationers.

Authors:  Anne H Berman; Ramesh Farzanfar; Marianne Kristiansson; Per Carlbring; Robert H Friedman
Journal:  J Med Syst       Date:  2010-08-19       Impact factor: 4.460

2.  How health care systems can begin to address the challenge of limited literacy.

Authors:  Michael K Paasche-Orlow; Dean Schillinger; Sarah M Greene; Edward H Wagner
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2006-08       Impact factor: 5.128

Review 3.  Telephone follow-up, initiated by a hospital-based health professional, for postdischarge problems in patients discharged from hospital to home.

Authors:  P Mistiaen; E Poot
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2006-10-18

4.  Maximizing acceptability and usefulness of an automated telephone intervention: Lessons from a developmental mixed-methods approach.

Authors:  Jennifer Schneider; Amy Waterbury; Adrianne Feldstein; Jerena Donovan; William M Vollmer; Joan Dubanoski; Shelley Clark; Cynthia Rand
Journal:  Health Informatics J       Date:  2011-03       Impact factor: 2.681

5.  Ethnographic interviews to elicit patients' reactions to an intelligent interactive telephone health behavior advisor system.

Authors:  B Kaplan; R Farzanfar; R H Friedman
Journal:  Proc AMIA Symp       Date:  1999

6.  Psychometric properties of an automated telephone-based PHQ-9.

Authors:  Ramesh Farzanfar; Timothy Hereen; Joseph Fava; Jillian Davis; Louis Vachon; Robert Friedman
Journal:  Telemed J E Health       Date:  2013-11-12       Impact factor: 3.536

7.  Standardization of the assessment process within telerehabilitation in chronic diseases: a scoping meta-review.

Authors:  Blandine Chapel; François Alexandre; Nelly Heraud; Roxana Ologeanu-Taddei; Anne-Sophie Cases; François Bughin; Maurice Hayot
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2022-08-02       Impact factor: 2.908

Review 8.  Interactive voice response interventions targeting behaviour change: a systematic literature review with meta-analysis and meta-regression.

Authors:  Stergiani Tsoli; Stephen Sutton; Aikaterini Kassavou
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2018-02-24       Impact factor: 2.692

  8 in total

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