AI Article Synopsis

  • The COVID-19 pandemic led to a swift adoption of telemedicine, prompting the creation of a toolkit and nursing protocol to prepare patients for urology clinic visits.
  • A study assessed patient satisfaction and productivity from telehealth visits, finding that a majority of patients expressed high satisfaction and that younger patients and females reported even greater satisfaction.
  • Results indicated that telemedicine visits can effectively schedule imaging and procedures, demonstrating its effectiveness for comprehensive urologic care while maintaining high levels of patient engagement.

Article Abstract

Importance: The COVID-19 pandemic prompted telemedicine adoption. In March 2020, we developed an implementation toolkit with a nursing protocol for patient preparation before tertiary care urology clinic visits.

Objectives: Our primary objective was to determine patient satisfaction after implementation of a telemedicine toolkit. Our secondary objective was to assess downstream productivity generated from telehealth visits.

Study Design: We prospectively conducted a postvisit survey that included the Telehealth Usability Questionnaire, a validated survey assessing patient satisfaction, for all patients with documented completion of the nursing protocol to assess patient experience and satisfaction. We then performed a retrospective chart review of all telemedicine visits to determine downstream outcomes, including imaging and procedure scheduling.

Results: Between April and May 2020, 1,422 visits were completed, of which 265 had complete nursing protocol documentation. Eighteen of 265 (6.8%) reported setup assistance. Four (1.8%) were unsuccessful and converted to a nonvisual phone visit. Overall, 186 (70.1%) completed the Telehealth Usability Questionnaire with a mean score of 118.31 ± 23.44. High satisfaction was reported regardless of race, marital status, income, education, employment status, or travel distance. Younger age ( P = 0.017) and female sex ( P = 0.017) were associated with greater satisfaction. Of 1,422 total visits, imaging was ordered in 29%, office procedures scheduled in 14%, and surgery scheduled in 14%. New visits were more likely to result in procedure and surgery scheduling than returns ( P < 0.0001).

Conclusions: Our telemedicine toolkit designed to maximize patient engagement was successful in achieving patient-provider connectivity in 98% of patients with high satisfaction. Telemedicine visits are effective to provide comprehensive urologic care with implications beyond the pandemic.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/SPV.0000000000001211DOI Listing

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