A Comparison of Teleburn to In-Person Consultation of Pediatric Patients in a Children’s Emergency Department

Author:

Ayers Claci1ORCID,Byrd Hannah2,Kidd Rebecca1ORCID,Solomon Barbara1ORCID,Gondek Stephen3,Wagner Anne3ORCID,Mubang Ronnie34

Affiliation:

1. Division of Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Monroe Carell Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt , Nashville, TN 37232 , USA

2. Division of Pediatrics, Monroe Carell Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt , Nashville, TN 37232 , USA

3. Division of Acute Care Surgery, Department of General Surgery, Vanderbilt Burn Center , Nashville, TN 37232 , USA

4. Department of Plastic Surgery, Vanderbilt Burn Center , Nashville, TN 37232 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Pediatric burn care is an essential component of emergency care and there are disparities in access to regional burn centers. Teleburn is a tool that enables providers without a certified burn center to provide photos of a burn to experts and receive recommendations. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of a Teleburn system to the in-person consultation regarding burn infection rate, clinic follow-up rate, postburn admission rate, and 72-h bounce back rate. Data were collected from December 2019 to March 2022 through the electronic medical record. A total of 416 patient encounters that met the criteria were analyzed. A non-inferiority study was designed comparing proportional outcomes of Teleburn initial visits to emergency department visits regarding burn infection rate, clinic follow-up rate, postburn admission rate, and 72-h bounce back rate. The data were compared with a difference of greater than 10% being considered inferior. No differences were identified in rates of readmission—1.67% difference (95% CI −27%< x < 23.8%) and return within 72 h—0.7% difference (−18.4%< x < 19.7%). Teleburn patients were 12.6% less likely to follow-up (2.7%< x < 22.40%). Only one infection was identified, which was insufficient to conclude non-inferiority. While convenient, Teleburn consult could not be demonstrated to be non-inferior to in-person consultation. No differences in infection rates were identified, and differences in readmission and return were clinically insignificant. This study demonstrates that Teleburn may be effective and feasible for regional burn centers if follow-up can be improved.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference9 articles.

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2. Etiology and outcome of pediatric burns;Morrow,1996

3. Regional disparities in access to verified burn center care in the United States;Carmichael,2019

4. Geographic access to burn center hospitals;Klein,2009

5. Small pediatric burns can be safely managed on an outpatient basis;Grote,2020

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