| Literature DB >> 22809335 |
M Elizabeth Wilcox, Neill K J Adhikari.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Telemedicine extends intensivists' reach to critically ill patients cared for by other physicians. Our objective was to evaluate the impact of telemedicine on patients' outcomes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22809335 PMCID: PMC3580710 DOI: 10.1186/cc11429
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Figure 1Flowchart of study selection for the systematic review.
Characteristics of the included studies
| Source | ICUs/hospitals, | Age (years) | Sex (% male) | Illness severity | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control | Telemedicine | Control | Telemedicine | Control | Telemedicine | |||
| Rosenfeld | 1/1 | 628/227/201 | 61 | 61 | 56 | 57 | APACHE III 37 | APACHE III 38 |
| Breslow | 2/1 | 2,140/1,396/744 | 61 | 60 | 56 | 50 | APACHE III APS 39 | APACHE III |
| Marcin | 1/1 | 296/249/47 | 5.5 | 5.3 | NR | NR | PRISM III | PRISM III |
| Kohl | 1/1 | 2,811/189/2,622 | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Vespa | 1/1 | 1,218/578/640 | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Norman | 1/1 | 1,275/356/919 | NR | NR | NR | NR | APACHE IV 57 | APACHE IV 53 |
| Thomas | 6/5 | 4,142/2,034/2,108 | 60 | 59 | 51 | 53 | SAPS II 35 | SAPS II 34 |
| McCambridge | 3/1 | 1,913/954/959 | 65 | 64 | 50 | 50 | APACHE IV APS 57 | APACHE IV APS 58 |
| Morrison | 4/2 | 4,088/1,371/2,717 | 64 | 65 | 56 | 52 | APACHE III 49 | APACHE III 48 |
| Lilly | 7/1 | 6,290/1,529/4,761 | 62 | 64 | 57 | 57 | APACHE III 45 | APACHE III 58 |
| Willmitch | 10/5 | 24,656/6,504/18,152 | NR | NR | NR | NR | CMI 2.68 | CMI 2.77 |
All studies were conducted in the United States. Of the 49,457 patients enrolled, 33,870 were enrolled in the telemedicine arm. Continuous data are expressed as mean (SD). aThe number of patients in each category corresponds to the number used in the meta-analysis. APACHE, Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation; APS, Acute Physiology Score; CMI, Case Mix Index; ICU, intensive care unit; ISS, Injury Severity Score; NR, not reported; PRISM, Pediatric Risk of Mortality Score; SAPS, Simplified Acute Physiology Score.
Telemedicine intervention in the included studies
| Source | Type of hospital/ICU | Intervention details | Intervention dose | Equipment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rosenfeld | Academic-affiliated community hospital; surgical ICU | Tele-intensivist interacted with patients and healthcare personnel via dedicated video conferencing and data transmission equipment 24 hours/day | Formal video conferencing rounds occurred on 50% of days; otherwise, intensivist discussed each case with senior housestaff or attending physician | Spacelabs Medical, Seattle WA |
| Breslow | Tertiary care, teaching; medical and surgical ICUs | Tele-ICU staff (board certified intensivist, nurse) monitored all patients 19 hours/day (1200-0700) | Not described | VISICU Inc. (eICU CARE), Baltimore MD |
| Marcin | Tertiary referral; adult ICU (with some pediatric patients) | Consultation (at discretion of admitting physician) with tele-pediatric intensivist using portable telemedicine unit in pediatric ICU and five consultants' homes available 24 hours/day within 15 minutes | Number of consultations, one to seven per patient (median, 1; mean, 1.5) | Tandberg 800 video conference units |
| Kohl | Academic; surgical ICU | Tele-ICU staffed by board certified intensivists; no further details provided | Not described | VISICU Inc. (eICU CARE), Baltimore MD |
| Vespa | Academic; neurologic ICU | Robotic telepresence program for live interactive consultation and review of physiologic trends with intensivist [2000-0000 (weekdays); 1800 (weekends)] | Mean, two sessions/day | Robot: InTouch Health, Santa Barbara CA |
| Norman | Hospital not described; medical-surgical ICU | Tele-ICU staff ("team" included nurse; intensivist presence not specifically stated) reviewed patients; no further details provided | Not described | VISICU Inc. (eICU CARE), Baltimore MD |
| Thomas | Closedf medical and trauma/surgical ICU in tertiary care teaching hospital; two open medical-surgical ICUs in two small community hospitals; two open medical-surgical ICUs in two large urban hospitals | Tele-ICU staffed by two physicians (noon -7 am Monday-Friday, 24 hours/day weekends), four registered nurses, and two administrative technicians | Tele-ICU physicians gave 1,446 orders in 60 days (four ICUs) | VISICU Inc. (eICU CARE), Baltimore MD |
| McCambridge | Academic community hospital; three ICUs | Tele-ICU team (intensivist and critical care nurse) (1900-0700) admitted new patients and responded to phone calls from ICU nurses, computer-generated alerts, and radiographic abnormalities | Not described | Vistacom Inc, Allentown PA |
| Morrison | One community teaching hospital (medical ICU, surgical ICU, cardiac ICU) and one community nonteaching hospital (medical-surgical ICU) | Admitting physician responsible for care plan and determined involvement of tele-ICU (four categories from emergency care only to no restrictions) | Physician adoption of high-level (unrestricted) tele-ICU care differed (teaching hospital, 25% of physicians [post one], 57% [post two]; nonteaching hospital, 9% [post one], 27% [post two]) | VISICU Inc. (eICU CARE), Baltimore MD, including "Sentry Alerts" software |
| Lilly | Academic medical center; seven ICUs: three medical, three surgical, and one mixed cardiovascular | Tele-ICU (hospital staff intensivist, affiliate | Tele-ICU reviewed care plan for 48% of after-hours admissions (46% reviewed by other methods in pre period) | VISICU Inc. (eICU CARE), Baltimore MD; |
| Willmitch | Five community hospitals with 10 ICUs | Tele-ICU, staffed by one intensivist, three critical care nurses, and one secretary, 24 hours/day | All admitting and consulting physicians ( | Philips VISICU eCare Manager (Admission, discharge and transfer interfaces), Philips Smart Alerts, Philips VISICU camera system (Philips, Amsterdam, Netherlands) |
CPOE, computerized physician order entry; CRBSI, catheter-related bloodstream infection; DVT, deep vein thrombosis; EMR, electronic medical record; ICU, intensive care unit; MAR, medication administration record; PACS, picture archiving and communications system; VAP, ventilator-associated pneumonia. aActive system: continuous data monitoring with computer-generated alerts; high-intensity passive: continuous data monitoring without computer-generated alerts; low-intensity passive: no continuous data monitoring. bWe used data from both pre (baseline) periods. cOpen model refers to low-intensity on-site daytime intensivist staffing, in which patients may be cared for in the ICU without the mandatory involvement of an intensivist in their care. dPatients assigned to the control group in the meta-analysis include those from the baseline period and concurrent controls from the intervention period who did not receive a telemedicine consultation. ePatients in both intervention periods were included in the meta-analysis. fClosed model refers to high-intensity on-site daytime intensivist staffing, in which an intensivist must primarily manage or consult on all patients admitted to the ICU. gWe used data from both post (intervention) periods. hWe used data from all post (intervention) periods.
Figure 2Effect of telemedicine on ICU mortality (upper panel) and hospital mortality (lower panel). The pooled risk ratio with 95% confidence interval (CI) was calculated by using a random-effects model. Weight refers to the contribution of each study to the overall estimate of treatment effect.
Figure 3Effect of telemedicine on ICU length of stay (upper panel) and hospital length of stay (lower panel) in days. The pooled weighted mean difference with 95% confidence interval (CI) was calculated by using a random-effects model. Weight refers to the contribution of each study to the overall estimate of treatment effect.
Figure 4Subgroup analyses of effect of telemedicine on ICU mortality based on study quality (higher quality in upper panel and lower quality in lower panel). Pooled risk ratios were calculated by using a random-effects model. Weight refers to the contribution of each study to each subgroup's estimate of treatment effect. The interaction P value for the difference between risk ratios is 0.53.
Figure 5Subgroup analyses of effect of telemedicine on ICU mortality based on intensity of the intervention (continuous patient-data monitoring, with or without computer-generated alerts (active or high-intensity passive systems), in upper panel, and neither present (low-intensity passive systems) in lower panel). Pooled risk ratios were calculated by using a random-effects model. Weight refers to the contribution of each study to each subgroup's estimate of treatment effect. The interaction p value for the difference between risk ratios is 0.74.