| Literature DB >> 33996106 |
Meaghan Lunney1, Chandra Thomas2, Doreen Rabi1,2, Aminu K Bello3, Marcello Tonelli2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Demand for virtual visits (an online synchronous medical appointment between a health care provider and patient) is increasing due to the COVID-19 pandemic. There may be additional benefits of virtual visits as they appear to be convenient and potentially cost-saving to patients. People receiving maintenance hemodialysis require ongoing care from their nephrologist and may benefit from virtual visits; however, the optimal model for a virtual kidney clinic is unknown.Entities:
Keywords: feasibility; kidney failure; maintenance hemodialysis; video visit; virtual care
Year: 2021 PMID: 33996106 PMCID: PMC8082995 DOI: 10.1177/20543581211008698
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can J Kidney Health Dis ISSN: 2054-3581
Figure 1.Concept map of research study.
Figure 2.Description of the video visit process tested during the feasibility pilot study.
Demographics of Study Participants in Video Visit Pilot.
| Characteristic | N (%) or median (range) |
|---|---|
| Patients (n = 8) | |
| Female | 1 (12) |
| Age | 58 (38-72) |
| Location[ | |
| Rural | 5 (63) |
| Nearby city | 1 (12) |
| Calgary | 2 (25) |
| Site of dialysis | |
| In center | 4 (50) |
| Home | 4 (50) |
| Participated in evaluation | |
| Survey A | 5 (63) |
| Survey B | 6 (75) |
| Interview | 8 (100) |
| Nephrologists (n = 6) | |
| Female | 1 (17) |
| Years in practice | 15 (5-28) |
| Compensation model | |
| Fee-for-service | 2 (33) |
| Salary | 4 (67) |
Rural = at least 50 km from the kidney clinic; nearby city = located within the Calgary region 40 km from the kidney clinic.
Main Findings and Recommendations From a Video Visit Pilot for the Outpatient Management of People With Kidney Failure.
| Theme | Finding | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| IT infrastructure | ||
| Hardware | Health care providers often do not have computers with built-in webcams or microphones at their clinics. | Allow health care providers to use their own devices or acquire a clinic laptop and share as appropriate. |
| Not all patients have devices that work with virtual meeting platforms. | Offer tablets to patients to borrow as needed. | |
| Software | Skype for Business currently experiences issues with Apple products and does not work with iPads. Microsoft is also retiring the platform (or switching to Teams) in the future. | Select a brand and device-agnostic video visit platform. |
| Internet | Health care providers are unable to use devices not owned by the local health authority (Alberta Health Services) on the restricted network. | Allow devices not owned by Alberta Health Services to use the restricted network for video visits. |
| Some patients experienced breaks in video, delays, and so on due to poor Internet connectivity. | This did not appear to be a significant problem. Include in evaluation framework to monitor. | |
| Administration | ||
| Remuneration | The fee codes in Alberta do not currently allow for video visits (at the time of study). | Reassess the remuneration policies and the impact on virtual care delivery. Monitor the impact on system costs. |
| Governance | There are a number of activities relevant for operationalizing, monitoring, and evaluating virtual visits that need to be owned and managed. | Stakeholders meet, discuss, and individualize. |
| Process | ||
| Clinical workflow | New roles and responsibilities have been created for clinic staff and need to be clarified. | Identify current capacity in clinic and delegate or hire new staff as appropriate. |
| The clinic workflow activities (eg, greeting patient in waiting room, medication reconciliation, notifying patient if provider is running behind, responding to no-shows or late/early arrival, involving caregivers and multiple health care providers, etc) will still need to happen virtually and a revised clinic process for video visits is needed. | Process mapping and change management involve all team members when designing and testing strategy. Implement slowly and in a phased approach and monitor progress and unintended consequences (ie, Plan-Do-Study-Act). | |
| Virtual and in-person visits should be used together as part of a seamless and integrated system, where the modality of the visit should be intentionally chosen appropriately, considering the unique circumstances and preferences of each encounter. | There should be a formal process for clinics to follow when deciding whether an in-person or video visit is appropriate, which should involve shared decision-making between providers and patients. | |
| Training | Patients will need some training and support with how to use platform properly. | Ensure patients are familiar with how to install and use software. The level and type of support required will vary across patients. Involving family members may help address technology barriers. |
| Clinic staff and health care providers should have support with platform. | Employ a train-the-trainer approach in clinics and develop a process of support for clinics and providers as needed. | |