| Literature DB >> 21824388 |
Richard Wootton1, Kambiz Bahaadinbeigy, David Hailey.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A major benefit offered by telemedicine is the avoidance of travel, by patients, their carers and health care professionals. Unfortunately, there is very little published information about the extent of avoided travel. We propose to undertake a systematic review of literature which reports credible data on the reductions in travel associated with the use of telemedicine.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21824388 PMCID: PMC3178488 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-11-185
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Figure 1Example of avoided travel. The data represent the results of a hypothetical study in which 100 patients were seen by a dermatologist in hospital, and 100 patients were seen by a dermatologist using telemedicine. In both groups, 5% of the patients were considered to have been referred inappropriately (e.g. because the underlying skin problem had resolved by the time they were seen by the specialist). In the telemedicine group, 60 of the patients were managed successfully by telemedicine but 35 still required a conventional appointment. The effect of telemedicine could be considered as avoiding travel for 60% of those in the telemedicine group, although it could also be argued that the proportion was slightly higher (60 out of 95 appropriate referrals).
Factors which may influence the avoided travel resulting from a particular telemedicine application
| Modality | Store and forward |
| Hybrid | |
| Real time | |
| Setting - referral source | Home |
| Primary care | |
| Hospital | |
| Setting - referral location | Metropolitan |
| Rural | |
| Travel distance or travel time | Long (> = 1 hour) |
| Short (< 1 hour) | |
| Patient age | Young (fetal and paediatric) |
| Adult | |
| Elderly | |
| Urgency | Elective |
| Emergency | |
| Purpose | Diagnosis |
| Management (treatment, monitoring) | |
| Health system | Private |
| Public | |
| Specialty | Cardiology |
| Dermatology | |
| Psychiatry | |
| etc (see Table 4) |
Data for 20 teledermatology studies in which travel avoided was estimated
| Author | Year | Percentage of patients who avoided travel | Study design (a) | Sample size | Weight (b) | Country | Modality (c) | Urgency | Referral setting | Patient age | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Whited J [ | 2002 | 18.5 | 3 | 135 | 8 | USA | S/F | Elective | Primary care | Mean 61 years (SD 13.8) | |
| Bowns I [ | 2006 | 42.4 | 3 | 92 | 8 | UK | S/F | Elective | Primary care | 16 years and over | Excludes children |
| White H [ | 1999 | 25.0 | 2 | 40 | 4 | UK | S/F | Elective | Primary care | Not stated | |
| Loane M [ | 2000 | 31.3 | 3 | 96 | 8 | UK | S/F | Elective | Primary care | 7 months to 81 years | Loane 2000 is two arms of the same study |
| Taylor P [ | 2001 | 31.4 | 2 | 376 | 8 | UK | S/F | Elective | Hospital OPD clinic | Not stated | 376 tele-assessments; 194 patients |
| Knol A [ | 2006 | 51.4 | 2 | 306 | 8 | Netherlands | S/F | Elective | Primary care | 0-96 years (in larger sample of 505 patients) | |
| Wootton R [ | 2000 | 53.9 | 3 | 102 | 8 | UK | R/T | Elective | Primary care | 4 months to 89 years (in larger sample of 204 patients) | |
| Loane M [ | 2000 | 55.2 | 3 | 96 | 8 | UK | R/T | Elective | Primary care | 7 months to 81 years | Loane 2000 is two arms of the same study |
| Lamminen H [ | 2000 | 72.0 | 2 | 25 | 7 | Finland | R/T | Elective | Primary care | Mean 45 years (range 4-92) | |
| Granlund H [ | 2003 | 81.3 | 1 | 16 | 4 | Finland | R/T | Elective | Primary care | Mean 40 years (SD 21), both groups | 70% of 23 patients in video group said they had not visited hospital at 6-month follow-up |
| Chen T [ | 2010 | 94.0 | 1 | 429 | 6 | USA | S/F | Elective | Primary care | Mean 5.9 years (range 0-12 years 11 months) | Only children (12 years or younger) |
| Romero G [ | 2009 | 70.0 | 3 | 368 | 9 | Spain | Hybrid | Elective | Primary care | Mean 36 years (range 2 months -86 years) [but this includes an extra control group] | 192 pts had S/F alone; 176 had S/F and then Real-time |
| Eminovic N [ | 2009 | 39.0 | 3 | 200 | 9 | Netherlands | S/F | Elective | Primary care | Mean approx 43 years | |
| Moreno-Ramirez D [ | 2007 | 51.2 | 2 | 2009 | 8 | Spain | S/F | ?Urgent | Primary care | Mean 41.5 years | Pigmented skin lesions -- possible skin cancer |
| Klaz I [ | 2005 | 77.9 | 2 | 435 | 7 | Israel | S/F | Elective | Primary care | Mean 22.4 years (range 18-39) | Excludes children |
| Eminovic N [ | 2003 | 22.9 | 2 | 96 | 7 | Netherlands | S/F | Elective | Primary care | Mean 35 years | Patients provided the images |
| Oakley A [ | 2000 | 88.0 | 2 | 109 | 6 | New Zealand | R/T | Elective | Primary care | Mean 41 years (range 1 month to 94 years) [may include non-telederm patients as well) | |
| Burgiss S [ | 1997 | 92.0 | 1 | 87 | 4 | USA | R/T | Elective | Primary care | Not stated | |
| Gilmour E [ | 1998 | 50.8 | 3 | 61 | 8 | UK | R/T | Elective | Primary care | 3 months to 83 years (for all 126 patients) | |
| Jemec G [ | 2008 | 27.3 | 1 | 121 | 4 | Denmark (Faroes) | S/F | Elective | Primary care | Mean 37 years (SD 20) |
(a) 1 = prospective; 2 = estimated; 3 = retrospective (see text)
(b) score 3-9 (see text)
(c) S/F, store-and-forward; R/T, real-time
Figure 2Avoided referrals from primary care. Avoided referrals as a result of the use of teledermatology in referrals from primary care (20 studies from 1997-2010). The areas of the symbols are proportional to the study weights. The broken lines represent the avoided travel expected from the fitted model (see text).
Coefficients of fitted model (using Modality as a predictor)
| Unstandardized coefficients | Standardized coefficient | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| B | SE | Beta | t | ||
| (Baseline) | 42.816 | 5.616 | 7.6 | < 0.001 | |
| Dummy_modality2 | 24.487 | 9.011 | 0.539 | 2.7 | 0.014 |
Categories of specialties
| Specialty | Subspecialty | ... Specialty | ... Subspecialty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Allied Health | Pathology | ||
| Chiropractice | Anatomical | ||
| Occupational therapy | Bacteriology | ||
| Physiotherapy | Breast cancer | ||
| Podiatry | Clinical chemistry | ||
| Rehabilitation | Cytopathology | ||
| Speech therapy | Dermatology | ||
| Anaesthesia | Forensic | ||
| Intensive care | Haematology | ||
| Obstetric | Histology | ||
| Pain | Immunology | ||
| Emergency medicine | Microbiology | ||
| Neuropathology | |||
| General practice | Public Health | ||
| Environmental | |||
| Internal Medicine | Occupational | ||
| Cardiology | Preventive | ||
| Dermatology | Radiology | ||
| Endocrinology | Diagnostic | ||
| Gastroenterology | Neuroradiology | ||
| Genetics | Nuclear medicine | ||
| Geriatrics | Oncology | ||
| Haematology | Radiography | ||
| Hepatology | Radiotherapy | ||
| Immunology | Ultrasound | ||
| Infectious diseases | Surgery | ||
| Intensive care | Abdominal | ||
| Maternal/fetal | Burns | ||
| Neurology | Colon/Rectal | ||
| Oncology | ENT | ||
| Ophthalmology | Hand | ||
| Preventive | Head and neck | ||
| Renal | Maxillo-Facial | ||
| Reproductive | Neurosurgery | ||
| Respiratory | Oncology | ||
| Rheumatology | Ophthalmology | ||
| Sexual and reproductive health | Orthopaedics | ||
| Thoracic | Plastic | ||
| Tropical diseases | Spinal | ||
| Tropical medicine | Thoracic | ||
| Mental Health | Urology | ||
| Psychiatry | Vascular | ||
| Psychology | |||
| Nursing | |||
| Diabetes and pregnancy | |||
| Midwife | |||
| Paediatrics | |||
| Obstetrics and gynaecology | |||
| Colposcopy | |||
| Oncology | |||
| Reproductive | |||
| Urogynaecology | |||
| Other | |||
| Dietetics | |||
| Hospital pharmacy | |||
| Proxy consultant | |||
| Wound care | |||
| Paediatrics | |||
| Cardiology | |||
| Dentistry | |||
| Dermatology | |||
| Endocrinology | |||
| Gastroenterology | |||
| Genetics | |||
| Haematology | |||
| Immunology | |||
| Infectious diseases | |||
| Intensive care | |||
| Metabolic diseases | |||
| Neonatal | |||
| Neurology | |||
| Oncology | |||
| Physiotherapy | |||
| Psychiatry | |||
| Radiology | |||
| Renal | |||
| Respiratory | |||
| Rheumatology | |||
| Surgery |