| Literature DB >> 25343246 |
Laetitia Yperzeele1, Robbert-Jan Van Hooff1, Ann De Smedt1, Alexis Valenzuela Espinoza2, Rita Van Dyck3, Rohny Van de Casseye4, Andre Convents2, Ives Hubloue5, Door Lauwaert5, Jacques De Keyser6, Raf Brouns1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Telemedicine is currently mainly applied as an in-hospital service, but this technology also holds potential to improve emergency care in the prehospital arena. We report on the safety, feasibility and reliability of in-ambulance teleconsultation using a telemedicine system of the third generation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25343246 PMCID: PMC4208882 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0110043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1The PreSSUB 3.0 system.
The telemedicine device is securely mounted to the ceiling of the ambulance (A) and allows bidirectional audiovisual communication between the patient and the teleconsultant via integration of a microphone, speakers, a screen and a 360° view camera (B). The teleconsultant has mobile access to the telemedicine platform using a lightweight laptop computer with touch screen, integrated microphone, speakers and a webcam (C).
Figure 2Flow diagram of the FACT study.
Patient and intervention characteristics.*
| FACT | Control group |
| |
|
|
| ||
|
| |||
| Male gender§ | 20 (48.8%) | 57 (42.5%) |
|
| Age (years) # | 57.0 (38.5–80.5) | 65.0 (37.8–78.0) |
|
| Prehospital Glasgow Coma Scale score# | 15 (15–15) | 15 (14–15) |
|
| Prehospital diagnosis PIT§ | |||
| Cardiac arrest | 0 (0.0%) | 1 (0.7%) |
|
| Serious trauma | 4 (9.8%) | 6 (4.5%) |
|
| Respiratory distress | 5 (12.2%) | 11 (8.2%) |
|
| Acute coronary syndrome | 0 (0.0%) | 4 (3.0%) |
|
| Stroke | 3 (7.3%) | 9 (6.7%) |
|
| Intoxication | 3 (7.3%) | 10 (7.5%) |
|
| Other | 26 (63.4%) | 93 (69.4%) |
|
|
| |||
| Outside office hours§ | 28 (68.3%) | 71 (53.0%) |
|
| PIT intervention time (minutes) # | 36 (29–51) | 36 (28–47) |
|
* Data given as number (percentage) or as median (interquartile range). §Fisher's exact test. #Mann-Whitney U test.
Abbreviations: FACT, Feasibility of AmbulanCe-based Telemedicine; PIT, Prehospital
Intervention Team.
Detailed overview of the prehospital telemedicine diagnoses and the final in-hospital diagnose.
| Prehospital telemedicine diagnosis | Final in-hospital diagnosis | |
|
| 8 (19.5%) | 8 (19.5%) |
| Stroke | 5 (12.2%) | 3 (7.3%) |
| Other | 3 (7.3%) | 5 (12.2%) |
|
| 29 | 33 (80.5%) |
| Trauma | 10 (24.4%) | 10 (24.4%) |
| Respiratory disease | 8 (19.5%) | 9 (22.0%) |
| Gastro-intestinal disease | 3 (7.3%) | 4 (9.8%) |
| Intoxication | 3 (7.3%) | 3 (7.3%) |
| Acute pain | 2 (4.9%) | 3 (7.3%) |
| Labor | 2 (4.9%) | 1 (2.4%) |
| Dysglycemia | 1 (2.4%) | 1 (2.4%) |
| Vascular disease | 0 (0.0%) | 1 (2.4%) |
| Other | 0 (0.0%) | 1 (2.4%) |
|
| 4 (9.8%) | 0 (0.0%) |
Bandwidth and data transfer during prehospital teleconsultation*.
| Upload | Download | |
| (from the teleconsultant to the ambulance) | (from the ambulance to the teleconsultant) | |
|
| 163 (139–221) | 54 (19–113) |
|
| 812 (641–1060) | 167 (84–377) |
|
| 102 (74–180) | 35 (13–57) |
* Data given as median (interquartile range).
Abbreviations: kB/s: kilobytes per second; MB: megabyte.
Figure 3Box-and whisker plots demonstrating bandwidth per prehospital teleconsultation.
Box-and whisker plots demonstrating mean (A) and maximal (B) bandwidth per prehospital teleconsultation for download (from the ambulance to the teleconsultant) and for upload (from the teleconsultant to the ambulance). Hatched boxes represent teleconsultations outside of office hours; white boxes teleconsultations during office hours. Significant differences are indicated with * (P<0.05) or with ** (P<0.001).
Figure 4Map of Brussels indicating connectivity during prehospital telemedicine consultations.
Map of Brussels indicating the location of the Universitair Ziekenhuis Brussel (H) and the patient locations according to connectivity during prehospital telemedicine consultations (no signal loss: green ambulance; transient signal loss: yellow ambulance; permanent signal loss: red ambulance) during office hours (A) and outside office hours (B).