| Literature DB >> 35746989 |
Shantele Kemp Van Ee1, Heather McKelvey1, Timothy Williams1, Benjamin Shao1, Wei-Ting Lin1, Justin Luu1, Divya Sunny1, Shubhangi Kumar1, Shreya Narayan1, Alexandra Urdaneta1, Luis Perez1, Hailey Schwab1, Sean Riegle1, Robin J Jacobs2.
Abstract
Telemedicine intensive care unit (Tele-ICU) programs entail command centers staffed with intensivists and critical care nurses who electronically aid with and deliver real-time information to frontline clinicians. The benefits of Tele-ICU are numerous, but the barriers to it often prove insurmountable, accounting for slow adoption in rural and underserved areas where it is needed the most. Remote monitoring can quickly detect patient deterioration, while consultation provided by a remote intensivist expands the capabilities of smaller facilities. The emergence of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has brought about a sense of urgency, paving the way for the successful adaptation of tele-intensive care concepts. The goal of this scoping review is to map out the available published data regarding healthcare professionals' experiences with implementing Tele-ICU modalities during the COVID-19 pandemic. A primary literature search was performed on PubMed/MEDLINE and the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) databases from October 2020 to October 2021. Of the 1,083 records screened, 19 were identified as meeting our inclusion criteria and selected for the final scoping review. Five major areas of Tele-ICU use were identified: teleconsultation, telerounding, telemonitoring, family visitation via teleconference, and changing of hospital infrastructure. A heterogeneous mix of improvised Tele-ICU platforms emerged with a common theme of interdisciplinary and family collaboration in the care of critically ill patients. Existing Tele-ICU systems were expanded, and novel programs were launched. A groundbreaking national network in the U.S. (NETCCN) will standardize the deployment of Tele-ICU and expand its reach. Future research should focus on determining accurate costs and the most reliable forms of remote communication, physician compact agreement licensure, the practical composition of Tele-ICU teams, and standardized access to the electronic health record.Entities:
Keywords: covid-19; critical care; intensive care; intensivist; pandemic; telemedicine
Year: 2022 PMID: 35746989 PMCID: PMC9206410 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.25133
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram of the study selection
PRISMA: Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses: CINAHL: Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature
Summary of included studies
| Study | Description | Setting | Outcomes |
| Rangappa et al., 2021: Telemonitoring and shared remote decision-making; state-wide protocols for COVID treatment [ | Conducted telerounds for 28 districts over 10 weeks in April-June 2020 | Bangalore, India, in-patient hospital critical care | Case fatality rate (CFR) of 1.17%. Bangalore hospitals not connected to Tele-ICU cared for 3,419 patients during the same period for a CFR of 2.69% |
| Scott et al., 2020: NETCCN (National Emergency Tele-Critical Care Network). Telemedicine and Advanced Technology Research Center (TATRC) [ | Review of current technologies including telementoring, telemonitoring for isolation purposes using tablets, smart rings/bracelets for vital signs, and patient activity levels | Network to be nationwide in the United States | Proposal of a cloud-based low-resource stand-alone health information management system to create and coordinate virtual critical care wards |
| Macedo et al., 2021: ICUs equipped with telemedicine stations using dual high-resolution monitors, camera, echo-canceling microphone, and audio playback device [ | Descriptive observational study of the implementation of Tele-ICU, followed by a retrospective analysis of clinical data of patients with COVID-19 admitted to ICUs between April and July of 2020 | Division of Pulmonology, Institute of Coracao, Clinical Hospital, Faculty of Medicine at the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil, April-July 2020 | ICU mortality decreased from 73.2% in April to 58.7% in July. ICU length of stay (LOS) decreased by one day and hospital LOS by five days |
| Krouss et al., 2020: Loosening of licensure restrictions, malpractice indemnification, volunteer critical care specialists, and securing video platforms for teleconsults [ | Single-center, observational, QI initiative; 12-bed oncology floor converted to ICU. In-house critical care provided ICU consult. Allowed out-of-state physicians to practice on an emergency basis | Jacobi Medical Center, New York City, New York | 62.5% of respondents agreed it was an overall positive experience; 68.8% felt it improved care and decreased anxiety. Initial consults were low, added structured rounding, and consults rose by a factor of six |
| Chandra et al., 2021: A hybrid model for Tele-ICU by cross-country telemonitoring and remote virtual rounding, connecting Washington physicians to New York [ | To counteract the shortage of critical care physicians, collaboration with Washington State. A hybrid model developed for virtual rounding on critically ill, 40-60 patients per day | Northwell Health, 23 hospitals, 40 ICUs (500 beds) in downstate NY. Expanded to over 1,000 ICU beds during the COVID-19 surge. Tele-ICU expanded from 176 beds during pre-COVID to 450 beds | Northwell decreased staffing by 1.35 full-time employees for each six-hour shift. This freed up New York physicians who had been used outside of their specialty |
| Ramnath et al., 2021: Evaluated hybrid of in-person care and telemedicine [ | Creation of a hybrid, multi-institutional critical care program. U.S.-based Tele-ICU had direct patient interaction, and Mexico Tele-ICU had a case-based model | University of California San Diego Health System and North Baja region of Mexico | An additional 19% of patients received evidence-based practice as a result of Tele-ICU; 78% of staff were more confident caring for COVID-19 patients in the ICU |
| Pamplin et al., 2021: U.S. Army Medical Research and Development Command tasked to develop research proposals to produce rapidly deployable modalities at the pandemic onset [ | Health and Human Services Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response's need for rapidly deployable, hardware-light Tele-ICU to augment expertise when local experts were unavailable | Four NETCCN teams with 238 remote experts servicing six hospital locations with about 221 patients registered and nine ICU beds and 126 hospital beds | Experts assisted local providers with life-threatening cases and avoiding hospitalizations through remote home monitoring and supporting end-of-life care |
| Kennedy et al., 2021: Review of telephone and video communication [ | A qualitative interviewing study was conducted with a sample of 21 family members and 14 clinicians within the medical center. Content analysis was used to develop a codebook for interview transcripts | University of Pittsburg School of Medicine/UPMC Presbyterian Hospital | Phone and video communication were somewhat effective but not as intimate as in-person communication. Phone calls were useful for brief updates, and video calls were preferable for decisions |
| Sasangohar et al., 2021: Evaluated attitudes toward family visitation via telemedicine methods for ICU patients during COVID [ | Interview of 346 family members of ICU patients post-visit via phone | Houston Methodist Hospital, Texas | >86% positive sentiments. Concerns: inability to communicate due to patient status (44%); technical difficulties (35%); lack of touch and physical presence (11%) |
| Li et al., 2021: Evaluated remote CT analysis and teleconsultation for medical personnel untrained in critical care. Mobile app established [ | Case study: Telemedicine mobile application Huayitong developed as a new platform for patients to access telehealth consultations. Provided triage, rounds, education, and consultations | West China Hospital of Sichuan University and remote services to 660 collaborating hospitals, in 183 cities around Western China | Huayitong was installed on smart devices. 10,557 online COVID-19 consultations were conducted for 6,662 patients. Quality of care improved at subordinate hospitals; improved health outcomes in rural areas |
| Dhala et al., 2020: Evaluation of the implementation of virtual ICU at Houston Methodist Hospital [ | Case study: March 2020; virtual ICUs expanded to include night coverage for specialty ICUs. By April, implementing virtual care during the day due to shortages owing to ill staff | Houston Methodist ICU at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic | 20 to 40 calls per day for family visitation through the virtual ICU system; surveys showed approval. Family members engaged in decisions and palliation |
| Kerlin et al., 2021: U.S. national hospital survey of COVID-19 strategies [ | A cross-sectional survey of U.S. hospitals with ICUs stratified based on size, teaching status, health system membership, and incidence of COVID-19 in geographic regions and the greatest number of cases selected | U.S. survey of chief nursing officers from 169 nationwide hospitals | Actions to increase or preserve ICU staff, including the use of ICU telemedicine, were highly variable, without a single dominant strategy. Expanded existing Tele-ICU programs by 39.1%, significant minority introduced new programs (25.6%) |
| Mohammed Sheata et al., 2021: Expert consultation in the emergency setting, such as interpretation of echocardiogram by a cardiologist to confirm cardiac tamponade [ | Case studies: Described how telemedicine played a vital role in the management of two patients with cardiac emergencies associated with COVID-19 | Bedside ICU at Ain Shams University Hospital, Cairo, Egypt with associated COVID-19 infections and cardiopulmonary emergencies | Lifesaving interventions in pulmonary embolus and cardiac tamponade in the setting of COVID-19 were initiated with confirmation of diagnosis via telemedicine to cardiology from intensivists at the bedside |
| Pilosof et al., 2021: Newly constructed ICU with in-house consultation via segregated intensivists [ | Semi-structured staff interviews. Field observations of COVID-19 ICU were conducted for qualitative analysis. Additional data included media coverage, hospital webinars, and analysis of architectural plans | Sheba Medical Center, Ramat Gan, Israel (Tel Aviv). 1,900-bed tertiary hospital, March-August 2020 | A hybrid model of virtual and physical visibility to overcome challenges associated with telemedicine technologies. Variety of tools; architectural design, InTouch Telepresence robot, and club car to maximize access |
| Pilosof et al., 2021: Central control booth design of in-house Tele-ICU [ | 40 formal interviews with staff, and four days of field observations at the COVID ICU and IMU | Sheba Medical Center, Ramat Gan, Israel (Tel Aviv). 1,900-bed tertiary hospital, March-August 2020 | Introduction of new ways to supervise and monitor to decrease errors. Promotes staff safety by minimizing contact with the virus |
| Munusamy et al., 2021: Residents and specialists conducted consecutive virtual and physical ward rounds on neurocritical patients [ | Virtual ward rounds were conducted by specialists receiving audiovisual information from residents wearing smart glasses. Management plans of both rounds compared; intra-rater reliability measured | Centre for Biomedical and Technology Integration, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Installed and integrated a secure mobile telemedicine system - MEDCOM Vision | Ten paired ward rounds were performed on 103 neurocritical care patients with excellent overall intra-rater reliability. Qualitative analysis indicated wide user acceptance and a high satisfaction rate |
| Singh et al., 2020: Evaluated equipping non-ICU rooms with virtual critical care interface technology [ | 130 mobile health carts for ICU and ED. Remote workstations for physicians to work from home when quarantined | Atrium Health, >40 hospitals and 900 care locations in Carolinas and Georgia. Virtual Critical Care (VCC) served >300 adult critical care beds across 12 hospitals pre-COVID-19 | Expansion of tele-critical care increased ICU beds. Virtual physicians had some difficulty in communication with staff at the bedside due to PPE restriction of audiovisual communication |
| Leverone et al., 2020: Exploration of remote critical care education and consultation in remote areas without intensivist expertise [ | Team-based Remote E-Learning and Tele-ICU (TREAT) used experienced critical care physicians to provide remote guidance for areas without intensivists while training residents | University of California San Diego Medical Center | 62% of clinicians cited access to expertise regarding mechanical ventilation as most important, and 19% the ability to ask questions to a critical care expert |
| Igra et al., 2020: Videoconferencing in-house to connect intensivists with inexperienced physicians caring for critical patients in newly opened makeshift ICUs [ | Case studies: Impromptu ICUs were formed by opening contiguous units, staffing with non-critical care personnel, and using bedside cameras to connect with intensivists | The Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust combines two west-London hospitals providing tertiary cardiothoracic care, including critical care with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) support | Allowed for live video feeds, hands-free at the bedside for relatively low cost and fast set-up. Important implications for disaster response and future pandemics as a model for expanding hospitals without utilizing outside agencies |