Tele-transitions of care (TTOC): a 12-month, randomized controlled trial evaluating the use of Telehealth to achieve triple aim objectives.

BMC Fam Pract

Department of Family, Population and Preventive Medicine, Stony Brook Medicine, Stony Brook, New York, 11794, USA.

Published: February 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Poor transitions of care can lead to higher health costs, frequent emergency room visits, and bad patient outcomes, prompting this study to explore how Telehealth might help.
  • A 12-month randomized controlled trial was conducted with 102 patients to compare Telehealth interventions against standard care, focusing on hospital readmissions and emergency room usage.
  • Results showed that Telehealth patients had better medication reconciliation and adherence, were more enthusiastic and confident about using Telehealth, but it did not significantly reduce emergency room visits or readmissions.

Article Abstract

Background: Poor transitions of care leads to increased health costs, over-utilization of emergency room departments, increased re-hospitalizations and causes poor patient experiences and outcomes. This study evaluated Telehealth feasibility in improving transitions of care.

Methods: This is a 12-month randomized controlled trial, evaluating the use of telehealth (remote patient monitoring and video visits) versus standard transitions of care with the primary outcomes of hospital readmission and emergency department utilization and secondary outcomes of access to care, medication management and adherence and patient engagement. Electronic Medical Record data, Health Information Exchange data and phone survey data was collected. Multi-variable logistic regression models were created to evaluate the effect of Telehealth on hospital readmission, emergency department utilization, medication adherence. Chi-square tests or Fisher's exact tests were used to compare the percentages of categorical variables between the Telehealth and control groups. T tests or Wilcoxon rank sum tests were used to compared means and medians between the two randomized groups.

Results: The study conducted between June 2017 and 2018, included 102 patients. Compared with the standard of care, Telehealth patients were more likely to have medicine reconciliation (p = 0.013) and were 7 times more likely to adhere to medication than the control group (p = 0.03). Telehealth patients exhibited enthusiasm (p = 0.0001), and confidence that Telehealth could improve their healthcare (p = 0.0001). Telehealth showed no statistical significance on emergency department utilization (p = 0.691) nor for readmissions (p = 0.31). 100% of Telehealth patients found the intervention to be valuable, 98% if given the opportunity, reported they would continue using telehealth to manage their healthcare needs, and 94% reported that the remote patient monitoring technology was useful.

Conclusions: Telehealth can improve transitions of care after hospital discharge improving patient engagement and adherence to medications. Although this study was unable to show the effect of Telehealth on reduced healthcare utilization, more research needs to be done in order to understand the true impact of Telehealth on preventing avoidable hospital readmission and emergency department visits.

Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.Gov ID: NCT03528850 Date Registered (Retrospective): 5/18/2018. Status: Completed. IRB #: 970227.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7007639PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12875-020-1094-5DOI Listing

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