| Literature DB >> 35722251 |
Lawrence R Wechsler1, Srinath Adusumalli2,3, Mary Elisabeth Deleener3, Ann Marie Huffenberger4, Gregory Kruse5, C William Hanson3,6.
Abstract
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) public health emergency necessitated changes in health care delivery that will have lasting implications. The University of Pennsylvania Health System is a large multihospital system with an academic medical center at its core. To continue to care for patients with and without COVID-19, the system had to rapidly deploy telemedicine. We describe the challenges faced with the existing telemedicine infrastructures, the central mechanisms created to facilitate the necessary conversions, and the workflow changes instituted to support both inpatient and outpatient activities for thousands of providers, many of whom had little or no experience with telemedicine. We also discuss innovations that occurred as a result of this transition and the future of telemedicine at our institution. © Lawrence R. Wechsler et al., 2020; Published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.Entities:
Keywords: health system; telehealth; telemedicine
Year: 2020 PMID: 35722251 PMCID: PMC8812293 DOI: 10.1089/tmr.2020.0009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Telemed Rep ISSN: 2692-4366
FIG. 1.Weekly average daily telemedicine visits from the start of the pandemic in March through June.
Changes in University of Pennsylvania Health System Telemedicine Functions to Address Infection Control Before and During the COVID-19 Pandemic
| Prepandemic | During pandemic | |
|---|---|---|
| Outpatient virtual visits | Telemedicine used for outpatient visits in limited role with <100 visits per day. Videoconferencing using on-premise server-based technology with limited capacity for expansion. | Conversion of most outpatient visits to telemedicine to avoid potential exposures in hospital clinic environment. Videoconferencing changed to cloud-based platform. Support through command center. |
| Inpatient teleconsultations | Inpatient teleconsults in selected areas including telestroke and critical care. | Deployment of iPads on stands throughout Penn hospitals to allow providers and staff to reduce exposures and conserve personal protective equipment. Access to all devices including patient's personal phones from proprietary Penn Medicine Switchboard application developed at University of Pennsylvania Health System. |
| Penn Medicine OnDemand | Service available primarily to faculty, staff, and students through MyChart portal. | Expanded availability by increasing staffing to accommodate dramatic increase in volume and to limit need for in-person evaluations at emergency departments, urgent care, or outpatient offices. Continued to utilize MyChart portal. |
| Penn Medicine at Home | Monitoring of selected patients at home with visits by home health care staff. | Applied home monitoring to COVID-19 patients with mild-to-moderate disease capable of management at home with remote monitoring to maintain availability of hospital beds for more severe patients with respiratory distress. |
FIG. 2.Penn OnDemand telemedicine encounters (by month).