| Literature DB >> 32396948 |
Aleha Aziz1, Noelia Zork1, Janice J Aubey1, Caitlin D Baptiste1, Mary E D'Alton1, Ukachi N Emeruwa1, Karin M Fuchs1, Dena Goffman1, Cynthia Gyamfi-Bannerman1, Jennifer H Haythe2, Anita P LaSala1, Nigel Madden1, Eliza C Miller3, Russell S Miller1, Catherine Monk1,4,5, Leslie Moroz1, Samsiya Ona1, Laurence E Ring6, Jean-Ju Sheen1, Erica S Spiegel1, Lynn L Simpson1, Hope S Yates1, Alexander M Friedman1.
Abstract
As New York City became an international epicenter of the novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, telehealth was rapidly integrated into prenatal care at Columbia University Irving Medical Center, an academic hospital system in Manhattan. Goals of implementation were to consolidate in-person prenatal screening, surveillance, and examinations into fewer in-person visits while maintaining patient access to ongoing antenatal care and subspecialty consultations via telehealth virtual visits. The rationale for this change was to minimize patient travel and thus risk for COVID-19 exposure. Because a large portion of obstetric patients had underlying medical or fetal conditions placing them at increased risk for adverse outcomes, prenatal care telehealth regimens were tailored for increased surveillance and/or counseling. Based on the incorporation of telehealth into prenatal care for high-risk patients, specific recommendations are made for the following conditions, clinical scenarios, and services: (1) hypertensive disorders of pregnancy including preeclampsia, gestational hypertension, and chronic hypertension; (2) pregestational and gestational diabetes mellitus; (3) maternal cardiovascular disease; (4) maternal neurologic conditions; (5) history of preterm birth and poor obstetrical history including prior stillbirth; (6) fetal conditions such as intrauterine growth restriction, congenital anomalies, and multiple gestations including monochorionic placentation; (7) genetic counseling; (8) mental health services; (9) obstetric anesthesia consultations; and (10) postpartum care. While telehealth virtual visits do not fully replace in-person encounters during prenatal care, they do offer a means of reducing potential patient and provider exposure to COVID-19 while providing consolidated in-person testing and services. KEY POINTS: · Telehealth for prenatal care is feasible.. · Telehealth may reduce coronavirus exposure during prenatal care.. · Telehealth should be tailored for high risk prenatal patients.. Thieme Medical Publishers 333 Seventh Avenue, New York, NY 10001, USA.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32396948 PMCID: PMC7356069 DOI: 10.1055/s-0040-1712121
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Perinatol ISSN: 0735-1631 Impact factor: 1.862
Sample prenatal care regimen incorporating telehealth
| GA | Visit type | Counseling and education | Associated evaluation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intake | Virtual | • Clinical history taken | |
| 11–13 wk | In-person | • Blood pressure cuff teaching | • Physical exam |
| 14–17 wk | Virtual | • Review of systems including mental health symptoms and intimate partner violence screening | • Home blood pressure and weight |
| 18–22 wk | In-person | • Review of systems | • Vital signs including weight |
| 23–26 wk | Virtual | • Review of systems | • Home blood pressure and weight |
| 27–28 wk | In-person | • Review of systems | • Vital signs including weight |
| 29–35 wk | 2 or 3 virtual visits | • Review of systems | • Home blood pressure and weight |
| 36 wk | In-person | • Labor precautions | • Vital signs including weight |
| Care from 36 wk on can modified to weekly in-person visits, based on risk; otherwise for weeks without in-person visit, virtual visit should be scheduled | |||
| 37–38 wk | 2 virtual | • Labor precautions | • Home blood pressure and weight |
| 39 wk | In-person | • Labor precautions | • Vital signs including weight |
| 40 wk | In-person | • Labor precautions | • Vital signs including weight |
Abbreviations: COVID-19, novel coronavirus disease 2019; ECV, external cephalic version; GA, gestational age; GBS, Group B streptococcus; TOLAC, trial of labor after cesarean.
Key telehealth management points for high-risk pregnancies
| High-risk condition | Key management points |
|---|---|
| Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy | • A home blood pressure cuff is a key resource for management |
| Diabetes (pregestational and gestational) | • Diabetes education may occur with dietician, diabetes educator, and provider via video visits |
| Cardiovascular disease | • A home blood pressure cuff is a key resource for management as is having a home scale to measure weight |
| Neurologic conditions | • Co-management with neurologist with virtual visits in the first and third trimester may be indicated |
| History of preterm birth and poor obstetrical history | • Absent a cerclage, cervical length screening should continue as indicated |
| Fetal conditions (IUGR, congenital anomalies, and multiple gestations) | • A home blood pressure cuff is a key resource for management |
| Genetic counseling | • Counseling may be performed virtually with visual aids and online resources |
| Mental health services | • Virtual visits may be conducted with acknowledgment that the experience is different than in-person encounters |
| Obstetric anesthesia | • Virtual visits may be performed with airway exam |
| Postpartum care | • Routine postpartum visits including post-cesarean may be performed virtually unless there are acute symptoms |
Abbreviation: IUGR, intrauterine growth restriction.