| Literature DB >> 20671991 |
G W Ickenstein1, S Groß, D Tenckhoff, P Hausn, U Becker, J Klisch, S Isenmann.
Abstract
Indroduction. At present, modern telemedicine methods are being introduced, that may contribute to reducing lack of qualified stroke patient care, particularly in less populated regions. With the help of video conferencing systems, a so-called neuromedical teleconsultation is carried out. Methods. The study included a multicentered, completely standardized survey of physicians in hospitals by means of a computerized on-line questionnaire. Descriptive statistical methods were used for data analysis. Results. 119 acute hospitals without neurology departments were included in the study. The most important reasons for participating in a teleneuromedical network is seen as the improvement in the quality of treatment (82%), the ability to avoid unnecessary patient transport (76%), easier and faster access to stroke expertise (72%) as well as better competitiveness among medical services (67%). The most significant problem areas are the financing system of teleneuromedicine with regard to the acquisition costs of the technical equipment (43%) and the compensation for the stroke-unit center with the specialists' consultation service (31%) as well as legal aspects of teleneuromedicine (27%). Conclusions. This investigation showed that there is a high acceptance for teleneuromedicine among co-operating hospitals. However these facilities have goals in addition to improved quality in stroke treatment. Therefore the use of teleneuromedicine must be also associated with long term incentives for the overall health care system, particularly since the implementation of a teleneuromedicine network system is time consuming and associated with high implementation costs.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20671991 PMCID: PMC2910403 DOI: 10.1155/2010/916868
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Telemed Appl ISSN: 1687-6415
Figure 1Sequence of events in teleconsultations in a teleneuromedical network [8, 9].
Figure 2Size of hospitals according to number of beds.
Figure 3“Time to CT” for each hospital with a cut-off time at 25 minutes.
Technical possibilities for remote data transmission in networking hospitals [10].
| Network access | Transmission speed | Suitability for teleneuromedicine | Costs |
|---|---|---|---|
| ISDN (point-to-point) | 64–128 KB and more | (i) Nationwide, also available in rural areas | 24 euro per month and 128 KB |
| (ii) Relatively slow | |||
| (iii) Only for small image transfers | |||
| (iv) Ability to bundle cables | |||
|
| |||
| ADSL (Internet) | 128–768 KB (upload) 1–16 MB (download) | (i) Fast downloading | 20–150 euro per month including connection costs |
| (ii) Not available everywhere | |||
| (iii) Home connection | |||
|
| |||
| SDSL (Internet) | 512 KB to 2 MB (upload and download) | (i) Fast Up- and downloading | 120–180 euro per month including connection costs |
| (ii) Not available everywhere | |||
| (iii) Suitable for small and mid-sized hospitals | |||
|
| |||
| Satellite (Internet) | 1,5 to 24 MB (download no upload) | (i) No upload → ISDN as feedback channel (upload) required | 30–130 euro per month according to provider and rate |
| (ii) Available everywhere | |||
| (iii) Badly suited for synchronous connection because of long latency periods | |||
|
| |||
| Leased line SFV (point-to-point) | 640 KB to 155 MB (upload and download) | (i) Highest reliability | 300–1200 euro per month |
| (ii) Possible high speed | |||
| (iii) Recommended for big hospitals | |||
Competitive advantage in relation to the size of the hospital.
|
| Teleneurology provides a competitive advantage | Teleneurology does |
|---|---|---|
| Hospitals with ≤200 beds ( | 48 (84%) | 9 (16%) |
|
| ||
| Hospitals with >200 beds ( | 32 (52%) | 30 (48%) |
|
| ||
| all hospitals | 80 (67%) | 39 (33%) |
Figure 4Advantages of teleneuromedical services: 1. easier and faster access to expertise, 2. improvement in establishing a diagnosis, 3. avoid unnecessary patient transport; 4. ability to carry out i.v. thrombolysis, 5. educational development of doctors, 6. improvement in the quality of treatment, 7. reduction of length of stay, 8. better competitiveness, 9. increasing patient numbers.
Figure 5Problematic areas of teleneuromedical services: 1. acceptance of teleneuromedicine 2. conflict with competency boundaries, 3. legal aspects, 4. data security reasons, 5. financing problems, 6. compensation for consultation service, 7. acquisition costs for technical equipment.