AI Article Synopsis

  • The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated the adoption of telemedicine, particularly in an academic sports medicine setting, highlighting the need to evaluate its quality and the barriers faced by patients and physicians.
  • Surveys conducted during the initial telemedicine phase revealed high patient satisfaction (91.6%-95.0%) and great physician comfort once they completed a few sessions, with a very low no-show rate of 2.7%.
  • Technical issues were identified as the main barrier to successful telemedicine; however, patients and physicians overall viewed it as a valuable and effective alternative to in-person visits.

Article Abstract

Introduction: The global pandemic due to SARS-CoV-2 has resulted in an expansion of telemedicine. Measures of quality and barriers for rapid use by patients and physicians are not well described.

Objective: To describe results from a quality improvement initiative during a rapid adoptive phase of telemedicine during the pandemic.

Design: Patient and physician satisfaction with synchronous audiovisual telemedicine visits was measured during the early adoptive phase (6 April 2020-17 April 2020) within the division of sports medicine in an academic Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (PM&R) department. Patients were invited to participate in a quality improvement initiative by completing an online survey at the end of a telemedicine visit. Physicians completed a separate survey.

Primary Outcome Measures: Patient measures included visit type, duration of encounter, quality, and satisfaction. Physicians reported on experiences performed telemedicine.

Results: Surveys were completed by 119 patients (293 telemedicine encounters, response rate 40.6%) and 14 physiatrists. Telemedicine was utilized primarily for follow-up visits (n = 74, 70.6%), and the most common duration was 15 to 29 minutes. Patients rated their telemedicine visit as "excellent" or "very good" across measures (91.6%-95.0%) including addressing concerns, communication, developing a treatment plan, convenience, and satisfaction. Value of completing a future telemedicine visit was measured at 84.9%. Most reported estimated travel time saved was in excess of 30 minutes. Rate of no-show was 2.7%. Most physicians (57.1%) had no prior experience with telemedicine visits, and most were comfortable performing these visits after completing 1 to 4 sessions (71%). Nearly all physicians (92.9%) rated their telemedicine experience as very good or excellent. The key barrier identified for telemedicine was technical issues. All physicians reported plans to perform telemedicine visits if reimbursement continues.

Conclusions: In summary, rapid expansion of telemedicine during the COVID-19 pandemic was well-received by a majority of patients and physicians. This suggests feasibility in rapid expansion of telemedicine for other outpatient sports medicine practices.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7276758PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pmrj.12422DOI Listing

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