| Literature DB >> 26231174 |
Peter Trnka1,2,3, Megan M White4, William D Renton5, Steven J McTaggart6,7, John R Burke8,9, Anthony C Smith10,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Telemedicine has emerged as an alternative mode of health care delivery over the last decade. To date, there is very limited published information in the field of telehealth and paediatric nephrology. The aim of this study was to review our experience with paediatric telenephrology in Queensland, Australia.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26231174 PMCID: PMC4522118 DOI: 10.1186/s12882-015-0127-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.388
Fig. 1Regional centres participating in paediatric telenephrology in Queensland
Fig. 2Annual paediatric nephrology outpatient activity in Queensland (2004 – 2013), comparing face-to-face visits (a) and telehealth consultations (b) at the Royal Children’s Hospital, Brisbane
Fig. 3Spectrum of clinical diagnoses reviewed by paediatric nephrologists during telehealth consultations
Paediatric nephrology telehealth consultations by diagnosis
| Diagnosis | Consults, | Type of Consult | Outcome of Consult | Patients | Sex | Age, years median (range) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N/R | TH/LOC/NS | M/F | ||||
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| CAKUT | 120 | 54/66 | 68/50/2 | 55 | 32/23 | 7 (3w – 18y) |
| Nephrotic Syndrome | 66 | 24/42 | 45/20/1 | 29 | 20/9 | 7.5 (1y – 18y) |
| Kidney Transplant | 50 | 4/46 | 46/4/0 | 6 | 6/0 | 12 (4y – 24y) |
| UTI | 37 | 27/10 | 10/26/1 | 27 | 12/15 | 5 (6 m – 17y) |
| GN | 25 | 14/11 | 14/11/0 | 14 | 9/5 | 12 (4y – 18y) |
| Vasculitis | 16 | 4/12 | 11/5/0 | 6 | 1/5 | 15 (10y – 21y) |
| Voiding Dysfunction | 12 | 10/2 | 3/9/0 | 11 | 3/8 | 8.5 (9 m – 17y) |
| Stones/Hypercalciuria | 10 | 6/4 | 1/8/1 | 8 | 5/3 | 13 (2 m – 24y) |
| Hypertension | 8 | 5/3 | 3/5/0 | 6 | 5/1 | 1.5 (10 m – 14y) |
| PKD | 8 | 5/3 | 4/4/0 | 5 | 0/5 | 6.5 (3 m – 15y) |
| Haematuria | 8 | 6/2 | 3/5/0 | 5 | 4/1 | 10.5 (2y – 15y) |
| Other | 42 | 18/24 | 25/14/3 | 23 | 14/9 | 10 (6w – 21y) |
N new, R review, TH telehealth follow-up, LOC local follow-up, NS not specified, M male, F female, CAKUT congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract, UTI urinary tract infection, GN glomerulonephritis, PKD polycystic kidney disease, w weeks, m months, y years
Estimated costs of providing the paediatric telenephrology service by telemedicine and face-to-face consultations during a one-year period from January to December 2013 (63 consultations)
| Cost | Telemedicine ($) | RCH Outpatients ($) |
|---|---|---|
| Telehealth coordinator ($38 per h), 33.33hrsa | 1,266 | 0 |
| Specialist ($140 per h), 22.22hrsb | 3,111 | 3,111 |
| Local admin support ($36 per h), 22.22hrsc | 0 | 800 |
| Regional presenter (paediatrician/medical officer) ($140 per h), 22.22hrsb | 3,111 | 0 |
| Regional admin support ($36 per h), 33.33hrsb | 1,200 | 0 |
| Patient traveld | 0 | 29,294 |
| Patient accommodationd | 0 | 7,320 |
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aUniversity of Queensland hourly rates were used at Level 6 [22]. An additional 50 % of time was added to the number of hours allocated to telehealth coordinator to account for clinic preparation, such as booking regional or remote videoconference sites
bSpecialist/Paediatrician hourly rates were calculated using the Queensland Governments Industrial agreement at the highest pay level (L29), plus a loading of 35 % for additional benefits [23]
cLocal administration support hourly rate was calculated using the Queensland Health industrial agreements for Queensland Government Industrial agreement at a Level 4 with 21 % on costs [24]
dQueensland Health Patient Travel Subsidy Scheme [8]