Literature DB >> 30336724

Using telehealth to improve access to hepatitis C treatment in the direct-acting antiviral therapy era.

Thomas R Schulz1,2, Kudzai Kanhutu1,2,3, Joseph Sasadeusz1, Sally Watkinson1, Beverley-Ann Biggs1,2.   

Abstract

Introduction: One-third of the Australian population lives outside major cities and this group has worse health outcomes. Telehealth is becoming an accepted way to improve patient access to specialist healthcare. Over 200,000 Australian’s have hepatitis C virus (HCV) and new treatments are very effective and well tolerated. We aim to demonstrate that HCV treatment utilising telehealth support for care delivery has cure rates similar to onsite care in clinical trials. We also report length of consultation and calculate reductions in travel and carbon output.
Methods: Patient demographic, clinical, and treatment outcome data were collected prospectively from hospital software and analysed retrospectively. This was an audit of all patients treated for HCV in one year from a single tertiary hospital that included telehealth in their care delivery.
Results: Sustained virological response was achieved in 51/52 (98%) patients with completed treatment courses, and 51/58 (88%) of those who had a planned telehealth consultation as part of their management. A median of 634 km of patient travel was saved per telehealth consultation. Discussion: We found that a telehealth-supported outreach programme for patients in regional Australia with HCV produced similar outcomes to clinical trials. There was a considerable saving in time and cost for the patients and significant environmental benefit through the reduction in carbon footprint associated with travel to distant specialist health services. We conclude that telehealth facilitated outreach is a feasible and effective way to access HCV treatment and cure in regional Australia.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Hepatitis C; direct-acting antiviral; immigrant; outreach; telehealth

Mesh:

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Year:  2018        PMID: 30336724     DOI: 10.1177/1357633X18806651

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Telemed Telecare        ISSN: 1357-633X            Impact factor:   6.184


  2 in total

1.  A Transparency Checklist for Carbon Footprint Calculations Applied within a Systematic Review of Virtual Care Interventions.

Authors:  Oliver Lange; Julian Plath; Timo F Dziggel; David F Karpa; Mattis Keil; Tom Becker; Wolf H Rogowski
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2022-06-18       Impact factor: 4.614

2.  Telehealth during the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic: Rapid expansion of telehealth outpatient use during a pandemic is possible if the programme is previously established.

Authors:  Thomas Schulz; Karrie Long; Kudzai Kanhutu; Ilana Bayrak; Douglas Johnson; Timothy Fazio
Journal:  J Telemed Telecare       Date:  2020-07-19       Impact factor: 6.344

  2 in total

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