| Literature DB >> 35564494 |
Giulio Nittari1, Demetris Savva2, Daniele Tomassoni3, Seyed Khosrow Tayebati1, Francesco Amenta1,4.
Abstract
During the recent COVID-19 pandemic, healthcare providers have been encouraged to increase their use of telemedicine and to adopt telemedicine platforms for the majority of their clients who have chronic illnesses. Due to the outbreak itself, almost all countries worldwide were placed under emergency lockdowns. In this paper, we reviewed the literature regarding the use of telemedicine during the COVID-19 pandemic. Consequentially, we identified the adoption of telemedicine in various countries worldwide and evaluated their future steps in order to increase the adoption of e-health technologies. As a result of COVID-19, the e-health agenda, especially telemedicine, has been accelerated in several countries. COVID-19 is affecting individuals' daily lives and has created major difficulties in the management of healthcare facilities for both infected and non-infected patients. A large portion of the rapid increase in the use of telemedicine can be attributed to evidence from previous pandemics as well as progress made by the field in response to COVID-19, especially in industrialized countries. A lack of effective treatment, large numbers of unvaccinated individuals, as well as social distancing and lockdown measures suggest telemedicine is the safest and most appropriate way of working with patients and doctors. In spite of this willingness, a large number of barriers need to be overcome in order for the telemedicine system to function properly and effectively throughout countries. In order for telemedicine to be sustainable and beneficial beyond the pandemic, several technical, educational, infrastructure, legal, and economic issues must be addressed and solved.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; e-health; public health emergency; remote treatment; social distance; telemedicine
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35564494 PMCID: PMC9105428 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19095101
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Summary of medical device/equipment used for telehealth purposes by medical specializations.
| Area of Specialization | Medical Device/Equipment | Usage | Telemedicine Usage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pneumonology | Portable spirometer | Diagnose and detect possible lung abnormalities. | Connected through smart devices/applications. |
| Cardiology | Electrocardiogram | Prevention screening. | Connected through smart devices/applications: can detect atrial fibrillation and early diagnosis of heart failure. |
| Diabetic Outpatient Clinic | Blood glucose meters | Self-monitoring blood glucose levels. | Connected through smart devices/applications. |
| Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | Photographs/video call | Post-operative follow-up. | Video/phone/email communication with physician for first consultations, follow-up, and management of post-operative wounds. |
| Urology | Urine analysis strips | Self-diagnosed, effective, fast, and reduction of sample analysis at laboratories. | Transmit values to a database for access from physician. |
| Infectious Diseases COVID-19 | Video call/telephone | Screening/diagnosis/therapy | Triage of patients: |
| Rheumatology | Telephone/video call/email | Follow-up and initial consultation | e-prescriptions, e-consultation, diagnosis, and home therapy instructions to decrease the hospital burden. |
| Internal Medicine | Video/phone call/email | Diagnosis and therapy | e-consent, e-prescriptions, e-consultation, diagnosis, and home treatments if possible to decrease the hospital burden. |
| Hypertension Outpatient Clinics | Blood pressure meters | Self-management, follow-up, and therapy | Connected through smart devices/applications. |