| Literature DB >> 22162965 |
Richard Wootton1, Anton Vladzymyrskyy, Maria Zolfo, Laurent Bonnardot.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Telemedicine has been used for many years to support doctors in the developing world. Several networks provide services in different settings and in different ways. However, to draw conclusions about which telemedicine networks are successful requires a method of evaluating them. No general consensus or validated framework exists for this purpose.Entities:
Keywords: developing countries; performance evaluation; telehealth; telemedicine
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22162965 PMCID: PMC3234078 DOI: 10.3402/gha.v4i0.7214
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Health Action ISSN: 1654-9880 Impact factor: 2.640
Telemedicine networks for low- and middle-income countries (second opinion teleconsultation networks providing services in the developing world with more than 7 years of experience)
| Network | Countries | Model |
|---|---|---|
| Swinfen Charitable Trust | Various | Targeted |
| Ukraine | Mainly Ukraine | Targeted |
| Institute of Tropical Medicine | Mainly Africa | Targeted |
| iPath | Various | Open |
| Partners Healthcare, Boston, USA | Cambodia | Targeted |
| Tripler Army Medical Center, Honolulu, USA | Mainly Pacific region | Targeted |
Fig. 1A telemedicine network viewed as a black box.
Fig. 2Overview of a telemedicine system. Telemedicine networks are not isolated but located within larger health organisations that in turn are part of the general environment.
Three second opinion networks that have operated for periods of 7–10 years
| 1. Swinfen Charitable Trust network |
| This service is provided by a UK charity and started operations in 1999. It provides advice to doctors in developing countries using web-based store-and-forward messaging. In 2009, there were approximately 300 referrers from 45 developing countries. The advice is provided by a panel of about 400 consultants who donate their expertise to the charity. In the first 10 years of operation, the network handled approximately 2,000 telemedicine cases. |
| 2. Ukrainian Teleconsultation network |
| This service started in 2000. This network is based in an expert trauma centre in Donetsk and provides treatment advice to seven community hospitals in the Donetsk region and four regional centres in the Ukraine using web-based store-and-forward and low-cost videoconferencing (Skype) methods. In the first 10 years, more than 700 teleconsultations were conducted in trauma and orthopaedics. |
| 3. Institute of Tropical Medicine HIV/AIDS Telemedicine network |
| This service is based at the Institute of Tropical Medicine in Antwerp and started in 2003. It provides second opinion advice about the use of antiretroviral therapy and AIDS care delivery using email and web-based store-and-forward methods. Expert advice from a network of 20 specialists in HIV/AIDS is offered to health care workers in resource-limited settings. In the first 7 years, the telemedicine service provided over 1,000 teleconsultations to health workers in more than 40 countries, most located in sub-Saharan Africa. |
Performance of three telemedicine networks
| SCT | Ukraine | ITM | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Performance measure | Comment | Value | Comment | Value | Comment | Value |
| Statistics for the year 2009 | Statistics for the year 2007–2009 | Statistics from April 2003–March 2009 | ||||
| 1. Rate of query arrival (new cases) | 19.4/month | 5.8/month | 15.5/month | |||
| 2. Proportion of failed queries | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||
| 3. Time to first reply from an expert | Median | 17 hours | 30 hours | 24 hours | ||
| 4. Quality of replies | Some evidence from a research project (10). Referring clinicians reported that in 100% of cases followed up ( | Not measured routinely | Some evidence from a research project (11). The quality of replies was measured according to a specially developed scale ( | Not measured routinely | Some evidence from a research project (12) | |
| User satisfaction (38 respondents) measured on a scale 1–10. Utility of advice was rated 8–9 by 70% of the respondents | Not measured routinely | |||||
| 5. Ease of system usage | Not measured | Not measured | Not measured | |||
| 1. Rate of query arrival | New queries, plus those requiring additional responses | 37.7/month | New queries | 5.8/month | New queries. | 15.5/month |
| 2. Time required | Not measured | 15–30 min | Not measured | |||
| 3. Resources available | 406 experts available | Five experts available | 16 experts available | |||
| 4. Feedback from experts/feedback on patient outcomes | Not measured | Some evidence from a research project (11). Feedback was available on the relevance of the teleconsultation for 63% of the cases ( | ||||
| Feedback was available on patient outcomes for 33% of the patients ( | Not measured routinely | Not measured | ||||
| 5. Ease of system usage | Not measured | Not measured | Not measured | |||
| 1. Rate of requests received (for those experts who received queries) | 2.8/year per expert | 5.4/year per expert | 9.9/year per expert | |||
| 2. Time required to answer | Median time from allocation to response | 11.0 hours | 30 min | Not measured | ||
| 3. Relevance to own expertise | Not measured | Not measured | Not measured | |||
| 4. Feedback on patient outcomes | Some evidence from a research project (10) | Not measured routinely | Some evidence from a research project (11) | Not measured routinely | Not measured | |
| 5. Ease of system usage | Not measured | Not measured | Not measured | |||
| 1. Clinical-effectiveness | Some evidence from a research project (10). Referring clinicians reported that the telemedicine advice was useful in 21 of 22 cases followed up, and the outcome for the patient was good in 15 cases | Not measured routinely | Some evidence from a research project (11). Referring clinicians reported that telemedicine produced satisfactory outcomes in 22% of cases ( | Not measured routinely | Some evidence from a research project (13). Referring clinicians reported that telemedicine was useful in influencing the management of their patients in 100% of cases ( | Not measured routinely |
| 2. Cost-effectiveness | Not measured | Not measured | Not measured | |||
| 3. Integration into the health care system, for example, involvement of local people | Not measured | Not measured | Not measured | |||