| Literature DB >> 33002530 |
Susie Q Lew1, Eric L Wallace2, Vesh Srivatana3, Bradley A Warady4, Suzanne Watnick5, Jayson Hood6, David L White7, Vikram Aggarwal8, Caroline Wilkie9, Mihran V Naljayan10, Mary Gellens11, Jeffrey Perl12, Martin J Schreiber13.
Abstract
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, technological advancements, regulatory waivers, and user acceptance have converged to boost telehealth activities. Due to the state of emergency, regulatory waivers in the United States have made it possible for providers to deliver and bill for services across state lines for new and established patients through Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)- and non-HIPAA-compliant platforms with home as the originating site and without geographic restrictions. Platforms have been developed or purchased to perform videoconferencing, and interdisciplinary dialysis teams have adapted to perform virtual visits. Telehealth experiences and challenges encountered by dialysis providers, clinicians, nurses, and patients have exposed health care disparities in areas such as access to care, bandwidth connectivity, availability of devices to perform telehealth, and socioeconomic and language barriers. Future directions in telehealth use, quality measures, and research in telehealth use need to be explored. Telehealth during the public health emergency has changed the practice of health care, with the post-COVID-19 world unlikely to resemble the prior era. The future impact of telehealth in patient care in the United States remains to be seen, especially in the context of the Advancing American Kidney Health Initiative.Entities:
Keywords: Nephrology; coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19); end-stage kidney disease (ESRD); home dialysis; home hemodialysis (HHD); peritoneal dialysis (PD); public health emergency; remote monitoring; telehealth; telemedicine
Year: 2020 PMID: 33002530 PMCID: PMC7521438 DOI: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2020.09.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Kidney Dis ISSN: 0272-6386 Impact factor: 8.860
The “No Touch” Physical Examination
| Parameter | Possible Findings |
|---|---|
| General | Well vs ill appearing |
| Eyes | (Non)-icteric sclera |
| Mouth | Dentation/oral cavity appears (ab)normal |
| Cardiac | Heart rate (ir)regular (based on patient counting the pulse out loud) |
| Pulmonary | Work of breathing with(out) effort |
| Gastrointestinal | (No) tenderness when the patient presses on the abdomen |
| Genital-urologic | (No) suprapubic tenderness when the patient presses in the area superior to the pubis |
| Musculoskeletal | (No) pedal edema |
| Neurologic | (Not) alert and oriented |
| Psychological | Normal vs anxious mood; normal vs flat affect |
| Hematologic | (No) excessive bruising or bleeding |
| PD specific | Exit site with(out) crust, drainage, or erythema |
| HD specific | AV fistula or AV graft with(out) bruit and thrill (based on patient’s assessment) |
Note: Only items that can be and are actually visualized should be documented. Some findings require the patient to elicit by tapping, squeezing, or pressing.
Abbreviations: AV, arteriovenous; CVC, central venous catheter; HD, hemodialysis; PD, peritoneal dialysis.
Figure 1The current and future landscape of home dialysis telehealth, showing the stakeholders, advantages, barriers/concerns, and future needs/considerations of telehealth.