| Literature DB >> 35054515 |
Michele Vitacca1, Simonetta Scalvini2.
Abstract
Telemedicine (TM)-the management of disease at a distance-has potential usefulness for patients with advanced respiratory disease. Underscoring this potential is the dramatic expansion of its applications in clinical medicine. However, since clinical studies testing this intervention often provide heterogeneous results, its role in the medical management of respiratory disorders remains inconclusive. A major problem in establishing TM's effectiveness is that it is not a single intervention; rather, it includes a number of divergent diagnostic and therapeutic modalities-and each must be tested separately. Reflecting the discord between the need for further documentation of its approaches and effectiveness and its rapid utilization without this needed information, a major challenge is the lack of international guidelines for its integration, regulation, operational plans, and guidance for professionals. Tailored TM, with increased flexibility to address differing healthcare contexts, has the potential to improve access to and quality of services while reducing costs and direct input by health professionals. We should view TM as a tool to aid healthcare professionals in managing their patients with respiratory diseases rather than as a stand-alone substitute to traditional medical care. As such, TM is a means rather than an end.Entities:
Keywords: e-health; information communication technology; integrated care; telemonitoring
Year: 2022 PMID: 35054515 PMCID: PMC8777880 DOI: 10.3390/life12010122
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Life (Basel) ISSN: 2075-1729
Effectiveness of telemedicine in lung diseases (reviews and meta-analyses).
| Disease(s) | Outcomes | References |
|---|---|---|
| COPD | Reduction in emergency room visits | [ |
| COPD | Mortality, all-cause readmissions, rate of exacerbation-related readmissions, all-cause hospital days, time to first hospital readmission, anxiety, depression, exercise capacity | [ |
| COPD/asthma | Self-management (SM) | [ |
| COPD | Oxygen saturation measurements utility | [ |
| Asthma | Symptoms and total dose of oral prednisolone | [ |
| Respiratory diseases | Utility of noninvasive portable Digital Technologies | [ |
| COPD | Use of Forced expiratory volume assessed daily, resting respiratory rate, respiratory sounds, end-tidal carbon dioxide level | [ |
| COPD/asthma | Adherence to therapy | [ |
| Chronic Respiratory Failure | Reduction in emergency room visits, exacerbation-related readmissions, GP urgent calls, and hospitalizations | [ |
Effectiveness of tele-rehabilitation in lung diseases (reviews and meta-analyses).
| Disease(s) | Outcomes | References |
|---|---|---|
| COPD | Health-related quality of life, exercise capacity at six and 12 months | [ |
| COPD interstitial lung disease bronchiectasis | Exercise capacity (6 min walk test), St George’s Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ), breathlessness on the Chronic Respiratory Questionnaire (CRQ) dyspnea domain score | [ |
| Cardiopulmonary diseases | Exercise capacity (6 min walk test), peak oxygen consumption, quality of life | [ |
| Respiratory diseases | Safety | [ |
| Respiratory diseases | Assessment of sit-to-stand tests, Timed Up and Go step test, 6 min walk test (not for patients at risk of desaturation) | [ |