| Literature DB >> 34964850 |
Theodora Oikonomidi1,2, Philippe Ravaud1,2,3, Diana Barger4, Viet-Thi Tran1,2.
Abstract
Importance: The COVID-19 pandemic led to the implementation of alternative care modalities (eg, teleconsultations and task shifting) that will continue to be implemented in parallel to traditional care after the pandemic. An ideal balance between alternative and traditional care modalities is unknown.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34964850 PMCID: PMC8717105 DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.41233
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JAMA Netw Open ISSN: 2574-3805
Participant Characteristics in the Unweighted and Weighted Sample
| Characteristic | Unweighted sample (n = 1529) | Weighted sample (n = 1529) |
|---|---|---|
| Sex | ||
| Female | 1072 (70.1) | 808 (52.8) |
| Male | 457 (29.9) | 721 (47.2) |
| Age, mean (SD), y | 50.3 (14.7) | 55.2 (17.0) |
| Educational level | ||
| Lower education | 44 (2.9) | 149 (9.7) |
| Middle school or equivalent | 148 (9.7) | 862 (56.4) |
| High school or equivalent | 226 (14.8) | 211 (13.8) |
| Associate’s degree | 323 (21.1) | 134 (8.8) |
| Undergraduate or graduate degree | 788 (51.5) | 173 (11.3) |
| Feeling about household income | ||
| Finding it very difficult on present income | 36 (2.4) | 35 (2.3) |
| Finding it difficult on present income | 145 (9.5) | 172 (11.2) |
| Coping on present income | 695 (45.5) | 809 (52.9) |
| Living comfortably on present income | 513 (33.6) | 368 (24.1) |
| No. of chronic conditions, median (IQR) | 2.0 (1.0-4.0) | 2.0 (1.0-4.0) |
| Multimorbidity | 1062 (69.5) | 1057 (69.1) |
| Self-reported diagnosis | ||
| Endometriosis | 303 (19.8) | 180 (11.8) |
| High blood pressure | 266 (17.4) | 307 (20.1) |
| Depression | 149 (9.7) | 151 (9.9) |
| Diabetes | 148 (9.7) | 166 (10.9) |
| Asthma | 130 (8.5) | 105 (6.9) |
| Cancer | 114 (7.5) | 146 (9.5) |
| Time since first diagnosis, median (IQR), y | 16.0 (6.0-28.0) | 17.0 (7.0-29.0) |
| Total score on the treatment burden questionnaire, median (IQR) | 55.0 (29.0-80.0) | 51.0 (25.0-80.0) |
| Has used teleconsultations | 792 (51.8) | 741 (48.5) |
| Has used online symptom-checkers | 258 (16.9) | 235 (15.4) |
| Has used remote monitoring | 198 (12.9) | 215 (14.0) |
Weighted data were obtained after calibration on margins for sex, age, and educational level by using data from a national census describing the French population with chronic conditions.
Sample sizes were 1389 in the unweighted groups and 1384 in the weighted group.
Nonexhaustive list. Some participants reported multiple conditions.
Data were missing in 127 participants.
Only participants who use monitoring to manage their condition were eligible to answer this question (n = 636 in the unweighted data set and n = 669 in the weighted data set).
Figure 1. Ideal Proportion and Perceived Appropriate Uses of Teleconsultations
A, Circumstances in which participants consider teleconsultations to be an appropriate (gray nodes) or inappropriate (orange nodes) replacement for in-person consultations. The blue nodes indicate circumstances that were reported as both appropriate and inappropriate by different study participants. The number of participants with conflicting opinions is reported in the parentheses. B, Proportion of participants who would, ideally, conduct their future consultations entirely in person (ideal proportion of teleconsultations, 0%-5%), primarily in person (ideal proportion of teleconsultations, 6%-50%), or primarily by teleconsultation (ideal proportion of teleconsultations, >50%).
The 15 Most Frequent Suggestions for the Appropriate and Inappropriate Uses of Alternative Care Modalities as a Replacement of the Traditional Care Equivalent as Perceived by 1529 Patients With Chronic Illness
| Use | Quotations |
|---|---|
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| |
| Appropriate for prescription renewal | “For a simple consultation to renew a prescription, teleconsultations are a great tool. But for more complex problems, being face-to-face with our physician is better.” (woman, 39 y, teleconsultation) |
| Appropriate to rapidly appraise urgency | “It could be practical to know quickly if there is a reason to worry or not.” (woman, 24 y old, online symptom checker) |
| “Yes, if it was a chronic condition for which the follow-up is already in place and if the symptoms were not too worrisome, [the online symptom checker] allows us to avoid a useless consultation and to feel reassured when symptoms appear.” (woman, 60 y, online symptom checker) | |
| Appropriate for adapting treatment | “It’s reassuring both for the patient and the physician (for example, [it shows] if the medication is well-tolerated and not rejected [by the patient] and other incidents).” (man, 84 y, remote monitoring) |
| Appropriate for routine follow-up consultations | “The essence of my contacts with my specialists are the discussion -not the exams (exams such as blood tests and radiology are done separately). Most of the time, physicians just read the exam results while I’m there, then we have a brief discussion, which could absolutely be done by teleconsultation. Being there in person does not add much value.” (man, 58 y, teleconsultation) |
| Appropriate when other types of care are unavailable (eg, on the weekend or at night) | “I’d first use a symptom checker before calling my doctor, if one for diseases other than covid was available, because experiencing pain often makes us panic and we need to calm down, so any tool that can help us rationalize and re-contextualize the pain is good, because our professional caregivers are not always available and nights can feel long sometimes, so I’d take anything that can help.” (woman, 36 y, online symptom checker) |
| Appropriate for urgent needs | “Teleconsultations could be used in specific, urgent cases. which I try to avoid experiencing. [I prefer] in-person consultations for all normal occasions, because the personal contact is part of care for me.” (woman, 41 y, teleconsultation) |
| Inappropriate for urgent needs | “In a situation where I do not feel like I am at major risk, I’d be satisfied with such a tool that can quickly orientate me toward the right care modality. But if I have symptoms that feel critical, I would opt for a real consultation because I know that it’s impossible to replace a global appraisal by a good doctor with a list of non-exhaustive, quick questions from this digital tool. If the tool was perfectly exhaustive though, I’d consult it much more often.” (woman, 36 y, online symptom checker) |
| Inappropriate for physical examinations | “Every other consultation should be done in person for the patient-physician relationship and to measure [patients’] blood pressure, weight, blood tests, etc.” (woman, 75 y, teleconsultation) |
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| Appropriate for patients requiring closer follow-up than that offered by traditional care | “I got to evaluate this tool through the example of a young pregnant woman in my family. It seems to work very well for those who need to follow their data more closely. This is not my case. The occasional medical tests suffice.” (woman, 65 y, remote monitoring) |
| Appropriate for patients with restricted mobility | “No need to wait seated on hard, uncomfortable chairs. Sitting down can be very painful for me, being home where it’s warm and quiet is much more pleasant. I have managed to keep my appointments even when I was having a crisis, I’d have cancelled these appointments if I had to get to the clinic, because transport + waiting on the chair would have been too difficult and it would have taken me time to recover afterwards.” (woman, 42 y, teleconsultation) |
| Appropriate for regions with few available health care professionals | “The reference center where I’m followed up for my endometriosis is more than 100 km from my place.” (woman, 36 y, teleconsultation) |
| Appropriate for stable condition | “When there is nothing new, no change, teleconsultations are largely sufficient and they save us time.” (woman, 54 y, teleconsultation) |
| Appropriate for conditions the symptoms of which can be observed and reported by patients | “I may not notice some symptoms that would alert a professional to an urgent issue. This has already happened in the past, and it could have been fatal.” (woman, 31 y, online symptom checker) |
| Inappropriate for patients prone to anxiety regarding their health | “It’s a great tool for well-informed patients, but it could be harmful for those who pay too much attention to themselves or are hypochondriacs.” (man, 57 y, online symptom checker) |
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| Appropriate if the tool is supervised by a physician | “[I would use symptom-checkers] only if my doctor was sent a notification in case of symptoms or behaviors that warrant one.” (man, 35 y, online symptom checker) |
Patients’ appraisal of the need for physical exams is subjective.
Refers to restrictions attributable to a health condition, including pain and fatigue.
Patients may overestimate the gravity of their symptoms.
Supervision refers to the physician reviewing the results of the symptom-checker, either as needed or irrespective of the symptom-checker’s result, and to the need for physicians to commit to view remote monitoring data.
Figure 2. Ideal Proportion and Perceived Appropriate Uses of Online Symptom-Checker Use
A, Circumstances in which participants consider using online symptom-checkers to identify the right course of action when new symptoms appear to be an appropriate (gray nodes) or inappropriate (orange nodes) replacement for contacting their physician. The blue nodes indicate circumstances that were reported as both appropriate and inappropriate by different study participants. For these nodes, the number of participants with conflicting opinions is reported in the parentheses. B, Proportion of participants who would, ideally, react to the appearance of new symptoms in the future entirely by contacting a physician (ideal proportion of symptom-checker use, 0%-5%), primarily by contacting a physician (ideal proportion of symptom-checker use, 6%-50%), or primarily by using symptom-checkers (ideal proportion of symptom-checker use, >50%).
Figure 3. Ideal Proportion and Perceived Appropriate Uses of Remote Monitoring
A, Circumstances in which participants consider remote monitoring for treatment adaptation outside consultations to be an appropriate (gray nodes) or inappropriate (orange nodes) replacement for adapting their treatment after revising monitoring data in consultations. The blue nodes indicate circumstances that were reported as both appropriate and inappropriate by different study participants. For these nodes, the number of participants with conflicting opinions is reported in the parentheses. B, Proportion of participants who would, ideally, have their treatment adapted entirely in consultations (ideal proportion of remote monitoring, 0%-5%), primarily in consultations (ideal proportion of remote monitoring, 6%-50%), or primarily outside consultations by using remote monitoring (ideal proportion of remote monitoring, >50%).