| Literature DB >> 33549262 |
Christine A Sinsky1, James T Jerzak2, Kevin D Hopkins3.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated adoption of telemedicine visits into American medicine. It is commonly believed that, within a matter of weeks, telemedicine was widely and successfully implemented and that medicine is forever changed. The experience on the ground, however, is more nuanced, with both positive and negative experiences for patients and clinicians. Advanced models of team-based care with in-room support (aTBC) have developed over the past decade, with strategic delegation of tasks to uptrained support staff, allowing physicians to provide undivided attention to their patients and greater access to care for their populations. Herein, we describe our initial experiences with telemedicine in the context of many years practicing in aTBC models. Our experience demonstrates that when implementing telemedicine visits, it is important to avoid a reflex reversion to the outmoded model of the physician alone in the room with the patient and instead bring forth the safety, quality, and satisfaction advantages associated with aTBC. We provide a practical "how-to" guide for implementing telemedicine visits; outline logistical details of representative video and audio visits from our own practices; describe new opportunities for family engagement, care coordination, and comanagement across specialties; and outline a research agenda going forward to further knowledge of the risks and benefits and optimal application of health care on a telemedicine platform.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33549262 PMCID: PMC7857703 DOI: 10.1016/j.mayocp.2020.11.020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mayo Clin Proc ISSN: 0025-6196 Impact factor: 7.616
Figure 1Cleveland Clinic Community Care encounters by visit type and virtual visits by type/platform.
Figure 2Bellin Health primary care encounters by visit type and virtual visits by type/platform.
Models of Teamwork for Virtual Visits
| Model of teamwork | Description | Workflow | Most appropriate- use cases |
|---|---|---|---|
| Team-based care with synchronous (real-time) “in-room” support | Video or phone visit with nurse or MA present from start to finish of appointment | Pre-visit: Nurse or MA virtually rooms patient (agenda setting; medication reconciliation, care-gap closure; home vital signs; preliminary review of pre-visit lab results) and pre-charting, as appropriate. Visit: Nurse/MA stays online, drafting visit note, pending orders and completing billing forms in real time, per physician/APP direction. Post-visit: Nurse/MA reviews visit and next steps with patient, engages patient in self-management support, as appropriate, and arranges for next visit, either in person or virtually, along with pre-visit lab testing. The physician/APP reviews and signs off on the note, orders and billing information. | All visit types, unless the patient requests the nurse or MA to leave during a portion of the visit. |
| Team-based care with asynchronous support | Nurse/MA present during pre-visit and sometimes also during post-visit | Pre-visit: Nurse/MA virtually rooms patient (agenda setting, medication reconciliation, care gap closure, home vitals, pre-visit lab result preliminary review) and pre-charting, as appropriate. (This may include pulling up a problem-focused template and drafting the majority of the visit documentation, along with pending the next appointment with pended pre-visit lab). Visit: Nurse/MA virtually hands off the patient to the physician for an appointment immediately to follow or the following day, and exits. Post-visit: The physician/APP may modify the visit note documentation and orders, although the much of data entry is anticipated to be accomplished during pre-charting by the Nurse/MA | Straightforward, single problem acute or chronic visits (ie, URI or controlled hypertension) |
APP = advanced practice provider; MA = medical assistant; URI = upper respriratory infection.
Research Agenda for Telemedicine in Ambulatory Care
| Research question | |
|---|---|
| Logistic | What types of visit are most appropriate for in person vs virtual care? (See |
| How does the total time vary for in-person vs video visit for comparable care? | |
| Does a pre-visit call for technology support improve the completion rate of virtual visits? | |
| Does a pre-visit call for agenda setting and information gathering (ie, photos of skin lesions) improve patient and physician satisfaction with the visit? | |
| How does aTBC (ie, MA/nurse drafts visit note and pends orders in real-time during visit) affect productivity, completeness of intended care, patient satisfaction, staff satisfaction, physician satisfaction, and total time per visit? | |
| If the nurse/MA is not in the room for a virtual visit, how are handoffs between staff and physician best accomplished? | |
| What are the implications for space requirements for clinics when many visits are virtual? | |
| What are the differences in care elements between virtual vists and in-office visits? Can these differences inform efficiencies for either visit type? | |
| Quality | Are there demonstrable quality differenes between in-office and virtual visits? |
| Does the appropriateness of medical decision making and accuracy of diagnosis vary by in-office vs virtual visits? | |
| What is the impact of tele-fragmentation (ie, in which outside vendors provided clinical services via telemedicine but do not provide in-office care) on continuity, quality, satisfaction, and overall costs of care? | |
| Technology | How can technology be optizmized to support virtual care? |
| Trust | How does telemedicine impact trust, including patient trust in physician and team, physician trust in patient, physician trust in team members? |
| Can intentional practices to improve presence (See Stanford “Presence 5” | |
| Costs and financing | What are the differences in costs vs revenue for virtual care when delivered with and without aTBC with in-room support? |
| Does the payment model (FFS vs capitated) affect the number and type of visits recommended by the physician or chosen by the patient? | |
| Do physicians order more or less tests during virtual visits vs in-person visits? |
aTBC = advanced team-based care; FFS = fee for service; MA = medical assistant.