Impact of community practice on providing in-patient oncology and hematology consults via telemedicine to remote rural hospital
Autor: | Natalie R. Dickson, Janet A Matheny, Jeffrey Patton, Mathew John Joseph, Larry Edward Bilbrey, Stacey L Poole |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Oncology
Cancer Research Telemedicine medicine.medical_specialty Hematology business.industry Far distance Hematology clinic Local community Rural hospital 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine 030220 oncology & carcinogenesis Internal medicine medicine Community practice In patient business 030215 immunology |
Zdroj: | Journal of Clinical Oncology. 37:278-278 |
ISSN: | 1527-7755 0732-183X |
DOI: | 10.1200/jco.2019.37.27_suppl.278 |
Popis: | 278 Background: A rural oncology/hematology clinic located a far distance from the local community hospital was not able to provide hospital consultation support. Collaboration between the practice and the hospital resulted in a telemedicine pilot study to provide oncology and hematology consults to in-patients using a telemedicine robot that connected patients to a hematologist/oncologist (heme/onc) over the internet. Methods: When an appropriate patient was identified at the hospital, a referring provider contacted the heme/onc for a consult. The heme/onc determined and relayed the appropriate time to schedule and perform the telemedicine consult. The referring provider arranged for hospital staff to deliver the telemedicine robot to the patient’s room at the scheduled time. The heme/onc reviewed clinical data in the hospital EMR and logged into the telemedicine robot to speak in consultation with the patient. Notes and orders were placed in the EMR. Out-patient follow-up at the oncology/hematology clinic was scheduled as needed. Supporting front-office and clinical workflows were developed, and policy and procedure established. Surveys were sent to patients and referring providers. Results: At baseline, hospital consults were not provided. In 2018, there were 27 oncology/hematology consults, of which 89% (24 of 27) were for malignancies. 52% (14 of 27) were seen in the clinic after discharge. To date 40 telemedicine consults have been completed. Patient and referring physician satisfaction are inconclusive due to low survey return. Conclusions: Telemedicine provides an effective means to provide specialty consultative support to rural hospitals by remote community providers. Despite the complexity and sensitive nature of oncology and hematology concerns, the technology has been embraced by referring providers and patients. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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