Framework to Advance Oncology-Related Telehealth.

JCO Clin Cancer Inform

Kristin L. Rising, Thomas Jefferson University; Judd E. Hollander, Sidney Kimmel Medical College at Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA; Marcia M. Ward, Rural Telehealth Research Center, University of Iowa; Divya Bhagianadh, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA; and Jason C. Goldwater, National Quality Forum, Washington, DC.

Published: December 2018

Purpose: As telehealth is increasingly used across the clinical care spectrum to provide patient-centered care, it is important to have robust measures to assess its impact on patient outcomes and care processes. The National Quality Forum (NQF) developed a Telehealth Framework to organize measures and inform target areas for measure development that includes the following four domains: access to care, financial impact or cost, experience, and effectiveness. Our goal is to identify and categorize within the NQF domains currently existing measures of telehealth applicable to oncology to detect priority areas for future research and measure development.

Methods: We reviewed telehealth-related measures applied to oncology care reported in systematic reviews and identified NQF-endorsed quality measures related to oncology care potentially amenable to telehealth. We organized identified measures by the NQF domains to inform suggestions for advancing the care of patients with cancer through telehealth.

Results: We identified 12 systematic reviews representing 183 studies reporting telehealth-related oncology research. Most studied outcomes related to diagnosis and treatment or user experience and symptom monitoring. Clinical effectiveness measures were most frequently reported (38%), and most were psychosocial. Patient, family, and/or caregiver experience was the next most frequently reported measure. There were only a few other cancer-related clinical effectiveness measures (eg, morbidity). Most NQF-endorsed oncology measures amenable to telehealth applied to the domains of access to care and effectiveness, with a lack of measures informing financial impact or cost and experience.

Conclusion: Overall, there has been a lack of quality measures to assess use of telehealth for the care of oncology patients. Future work should focus on developing measures within each of the NQF-identified domains, with special attention to the financial impact or cost domain.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/CCI.17.00156DOI Listing

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