| Literature DB >> 26858152 |
Patricia Knight1, Andrew Bonney, Grigorijs Teuss, Michelle Guppy, Danielle Lafferre, Judy Mullan, Stephen Barnett.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The use of telehealth technology to enable real-time consultations between patients and specialist services (to whom travel may be an impediment to the patient's care) has recently been encouraged in Australia through financial incentives. However, the uptake has been both fragmented and inconsistent. The potential benefits for patients include access to a broader range of specialist referral services, cost and time saving, and more rapid access to specialist services and a continuum of care through the triangulation of interaction between patient, primary health care providers (general practitioners and nurses), and specialists. Enhanced broadband connectivity and higher-grade encryption present an opportunity to trial the use of telehealth consulting as an intrinsic element of medical education for both medical students and doctors-in-training within rural practices and Aboriginal Medical Services.Entities:
Keywords: medical education; patient benefits; telehealth
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26858152 PMCID: PMC4763112 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.4510
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Characteristics of the 5 case study sites.
| Site | Rural area | Distance from Sydney (km) | Total interviews, n | Interviewees |
| Site 1 | RA2 | 617 | 14 | GPs, practice manager, nurse manager, mental health nurses, practice nurses, students |
| Site 2 | RA2 | 112 | 7 | GPs, practice manager, Prevocational General Practice Placement Program (PGPPP), students |
| Site 3 | M2; Aboriginal Medical Services, Urban | 88 | 7 | GPs, practice manager, practice nurses student |
| Site 4 | RA2 | 219 | 6 | GPs, practice manager, students |
| Site 9 | RA2 | 476 | 7 | GPs, practice manager, PGPPP |
Structure of the Rural, Remote and Metropolitan Areas (RRMA) classification.
| Zone | Category | |
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| M1 | Capital cities |
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| M2 | Other metropolitan centers (urban center population >100,000) |
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| R1 | Large rural centers (urban center population 25,000-99,999) |
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| R2 | Small rural centers (urban center population 10,000-24,999) |
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| R3 | Other rural areas (urban center population <10,000) |
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| Rem1 | Remote centers (urban center population >4999) |
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| Rem2 | Other remote areas (urban center population <5000) |
Quantitative evaluation results of telehealth consultations from participating medical practices (total evaluations completed: n=38).
| Question: Thinking about the telehealth consultation in which you were just involved, to what extent do you agree with the following statements? | Response, n (%) | ||||
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| Strongly disagree | Disagree | Neither | Agree | Strongly agree |
| I think the technological aspects of the telehealth consultation (image, sound quality, or reliability) were satisfactory for its purpose. |
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| 2 (5) | 17 (45) | 19 (50) |
| I think the clinical aspects of the telehealth consultation (history taking, examination, or discussion of management plan by video consultation) were satisfactory for its purpose. |
| 2 (5) | 1 (3) | 23 (60) | 12 (32) |
| I think the interpersonal aspects of the telehealth consultation (interaction between doctors and patient via video consultation) were satisfactory for its purpose. |
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| 23 (60) | 15 (40) |
| I think the telehealth consultation was valuable as a student/registrar learning experience. |
| 1 (3) | 2 (5) | 21 (55) | 14 (37) |