Inpatient Telemedicine for Neurology Consultation at Satellite Hospitals: Patient and Provider Perspectives

Author:

PJ Juneja1ORCID,AM Tolczyk2,RE Strowd2ORCID,LD Strauss2,R Graham2,L Burton2,C Michael3,M Ezzeddine2,EP Pharr2,J Boggs2,S Kumar2,C O’Donovan2,CT Tegeler2,Guzik Amy K2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA

2. Department of Neurology, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston Salem, NC, USA

3. Wake Forest Baptist Health, Lexington Medical Center, Lexington, NC, USA

Abstract

Background and Purpose: Describe an inpatient teleneurology consultation service novel to our hospital system, and capture feedback from patients, ordering providers, and consulting neurologists. Methods : A single cohort of teleneurology consult patients was surveyed via telephone. Ordering and consulting providers completed online surveys. Quantitative survey data was reported using descriptive statistics and free-response survey data was summarized. Patient demographics and consult data were gathered via retrospective chart review. Results : Telephone survey was obtained from 25 of 53 patients receiving teleneurology consults from June 1–September 30, 2020. Patient-reported benefits included better understanding of condition (72%) and ability to remain close to home. Online surveys were completed by 11 ordering providers and by consulting neurologists on 20 telemedicine encounters. Ordering providers reported they were likely to use the service again (98.7%), agreed it added value to patient care (91%) and was valued by patients (82%), with concern for missed diagnosis (46%) and potential patient transfer (36%) without the service. In contrast, fewer consulting neurologists predicted need for transfer (5%) or missed diagnosis (10%) in the absence of teleneurology, though 20% indicated that length of stay may increase without the service. Conclusion: We confirm feasibility of an inpatient teleneurology service run by an academic medical center. Satisfaction was high among all key stakeholders, with few transfers to a tertiary care center. This service is valuable to patients, ordering providers, and potentially the hospital network, as a community based care model of neurological care, centered on the needs of the patient and hospitalist.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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