| Literature DB >> 28588379 |
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28588379 PMCID: PMC5439356 DOI: 10.2337/ds16-0004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes Spectr ISSN: 1040-9165
FIGURE 1.PRISMA flow diagram.
Interactive Video Telehealth Models
| Source | Design | Sample | Intervention | Results | Implications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Holloway et al., 2011 ( | Intervention project; nurse practitioner–led multidisciplinary team to enhance diabetes care through DSME using pre-/postintervention evaluation | Nonrandom purposive sample ( | Telehealth video conferencing for diabetes care and DSME | Most (97%) of program staff felt that telehealth was a useful tool for patient management and education; patients adapted quickly to technology and shared sensitive issues openly; after 1 year, patients reported improvement in diabetes care of 30–200% post-intervention compared to baseline | Model had a positive impact on diabetes self-management and patient satisfaction by bringing a multidisciplinary team into a rural setting to work in partnership with local PCPs |
| Levin et al., 2013 ( | Retrospective study | Convenience sample ( | Synchronous and asynchronous telehealth interaction with patients and providers for diabetes clinical care and management, including: | Intervention group compared with data from the Danish National Diabetes Registry: | Major cost savings for patients using telemedicine; estimated savings was $60–70 per patient per visit; overall program cost savings were $9,430–11,170 compared with usual care |
| Post-intervention: | |||||
Endocrinology consultations by video conferences Alternate communication with providers via email, cell phone, and EMR data transmission | Type 1 diabetes patients: mean A1C 8.0 vs. 7.9%, not significant Type 2 diabetes patients: mean A1C 7.4 vs. 7.6%, | ||||
| Six-month telemedicine intervention; two visits and two A1C values | Patient satisfaction was related to major reduction in transportation costs | ||||
| Siminerio et al., 2014 ( | Baseline and post-program behavioral and psychosocial survey; satisfaction survey post-program | Convenience sample ( | Video telehealth for DSME, diabetes self-care empowerment; diabetes team consisting of endocrinologist in urban setting and diabetes nurse educator in rural setting; DES-SF tool used for empowerment assessment | Significant improvement in patient empowerment and self-care when patients received telehealth DSME (DES-SF score 3.8 vs. 4.5, | Alternative care model for diabetes education and specialty care management in rural community |
| Toledo et al., 2014 ( | Clinical trial | Convenience sample ( | Videoconferencing-based telemedicine with endocrinologists for 1-year follow-up study | Statistically improved glycemic control in the intervention group; baseline A1C 8.6 ± 0.3 in the telemedicine group vs. 8.9 ± 0.4% in usual care; completion A1C 6.6 ± 0.2 in the telemedicine group vs. 8.1 ± 0.2% in usual care, | Videoconferencing-based telemedicine consultants offer potential to overcome geographical barriers to care in rural communities; this model had a significant impact in improving A1C outcomes |
| Davis et al., 2010 ( | Clinical trial | Random sample ( | Interactive video conferencing for DSME and eye exams | Significant improvement in A1C in the intervention group (baseline 9.2 ± 0.4, 6-month 8.3 ± 0.5; and 12-month 7.4 ± 0.5%) compared with usual care (baseline 8.7 ± 0.4, 6-month 8.6 ± 0.4, and 12-month 8.1 ± 0.4%); | The model used retinal imaging to provide eye exams; digital retinal imaging was electronically transferred to a network ophthalmologist, and abnormal findings were linked to care |
| Fatehi et al., 2013 ( | Descriptive study with post-program questionnaire | Convenience sample ( | Medical interventions; reviewed endocrinologists’ opinions on the use of telehealth for specialty care | Fifty-six consultations were provided from a tertiary teaching hospital; after consultations, the physicians interviewed indicated that 34% of the cases seen could have made a better decision if there had been an in-person physical exam; 12 patients required an in-person exam | Endocrinology specialty care can be performed through telehealth; most needed exams can be performed by local provider or, if necessary, in-person follow-up after a telehealth consultation |
| Fatehi et al., 2015 ( | Cross-sectional observational survey | Questionnaires mailed to 62 participants enrolled in telemedicine program in Australia | Questionnaire with 15 multiple-choice questions and 1 open-ended question was developed for assessing patient satisfaction with video conferencing for specialty care | Questionnaire items showed strong internal consistency (Cronbach’s χ = 0.90); 34% response rate; four dimension assessment: Clinical assessment: 21% were concerned that lack of physical contact could be a problem managing their diabetes 22/24 were satisfied with equipment and technical features 23/24 were satisfied with communication with the specialist 23/24 reported telemedicine had improved their access to specialist care and that they would use the service again | Patients with diabetes who were seen remotely by endocrinologists via video conferencing were satisfied with remote consultation |
| Toledo et al., 2012 ( | Descriptive pilot study | Convenience sample ( | Telemedicine endocrinology consultants; PCPs in rural, medically underserved community in Pennsylvania referred patients with poorly controlled diabetes for consultation through telehealth | Mean A1C improved from 9.6 ± 0.4 to 8.5 ± 0.4% ( | High levels of satisfaction reported by patients and providers; telehealth model offers improved access to specialty care in rural setting |
| Young et al., 2012 ( | Randomized experimental study (control group vs. intervention group) | Random sample ( | 2-hour orientation at a rural clinic followed by a series of five phone or video contacts ∼2 weeks apart; English- and Spanish-speaking nurses provided coaching; Diabetes Empowerment Scale-Short Form and Diabetes History Form from the Michigan Diabetes Research and Training Center were used as participant assessment tools | From baseline to 9 months post-enrollment, intervention was associated with gains in five of eight indicators of self-efficacy ( | Significant improvement in participant self-efficacy in nurse coaching intervention group indicates that this telehealth technology may be an innovative way to empower individuals to work on goals for diabetes self-management, especially in rural areas |
| Watts et al., 2015 ( | Retrospective study | Purposive sample ( | Telehealth video conference with diabetes specialists at an urban VHA hospital trained two PCPs at a rural VHA community clinic | After training, PCPs implemented two diabetes mini-clinics over 15 months; patients’ mean A1C improved from 10.2 ± 1.4 to 8.4 ± 1.8% ( | Telehealth models can be used for rural PCP professional training and have potential for future quality improvement projects for diabetes care/management |
Telehealth Models: Cost-Benefit Analysis
| Source | Design | Sample | Intervention | Results | Implications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Verbosky et al., 2016 ( | Pilot descriptive study to evaluate cost savings and patient satisfaction with CVT technology | Convenience sample ( | CVT using real-time video and audio transmission | Average baseline A1C was 9%; 19 CVT encounters were performed; average distance from patients’ home to medical center was 59.4 miles; average distance to clinic was 11.6 miles; total travel distance averted was 1,795 miles; patients averted 88 miles for each telehealth visit; cost savings ranged from $182 to $300 over 5 months; patient satisfaction rate with telehealth was 91%, and 85% of veterans said they would recommend CVT to others | This small pilot showed promise in improving access to care and reducing costs, time, and risks associated with travel for patients living with diabetes in a rural area |
| Palmas et al., 2010 ( | Cost analysis for the IDEATel program offering home telemedicine monitoring and education | Medicare claims data of IDEATel participants ( | Cost analysis of a diabetes case management telemedicine program; study evaluated reductions in health care expenditures and assessed costs for implementing the telehealth program in the future | Over a 6-year timeframe, $622 per participant per month was spent; mean (SE) annual Medicare payments were similar in the usual care and telemedicine groups, $9,040 (SE $386) and $9,669 (SE $443) per participant ( | Integrated remote monitoring technology for high-risk patients with diabetes did not prove cost effective; reduction in technology expense is needed to make this model a viable option in health care |
| Baker et al., 2011 ( | Cost analysis of Health Buddy program to evaluate whether program influenced health care spending | Medicare claims data of patients enrolled in Health Buddy program (intervention | Health Buddy program developed to improve care management; study examined whether spending patterns changed for the intervention group over first 2 years the program was offered; telemedicine group expenses compared to a control group that did not receive the intervention | Spending reduction in telemedicine group was significant; reductions of $312–542 per intervention patient per quarter; program expense of $128 per patient per month; net savings 7.7–13.3% per person per quarter | Carefully designed and implemented care management using low-cost telemedicine technology can help reduce health care spending |
| Kesavadev et al., 2012 ( | Retrospective cohort study to evaluate glycemic control and costs | Convenience sample ( | Evaluation of participants enrolled in a telemedicine program who received follow-up by phone, email, or secure website; patients reported SMBG values and obtained treatment advice without a physical visit to the clinic; patients had access to a multidisciplinary team of physicians, diabetes educators, dietitians, nurses, pharmacists, and psychologists for 24-hour care 7 days per week | Patients showed a significant reduction in A1C from baseline at 3 and 6 months; mean A1C at baseline was 8.5 ± 1.4%. At 6-month visit, A1C was 6.3 ± 0.6% showing statistically significant improvement of 2.25% ( | Telemedicine intervention empowering patients to make decisions about goals, therapeutic options, and self-care behaviors are effective in achieving glycemic control and decreasing health care costs; despite costs of 24-hour care, improved health outcomes may decrease overall health care system costs |