Teleconsulting for Minor Head Injury: The Piedmont Experience

Author:

Migliaretti Giuseppe1,Ciaramitaro Palma2,Berchialla Paola1,Scarinzi Cecilia1,Andrini Rita3,Orlando Anna4,Faccani Giuliano2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Public Health and Microbiology, University of Turin, Italy;

2. Clinical Neurophysiology Unit, Neurosurgery Division, Health and Science Centre of Turin, Italy;

3. Society for the Regional Information System ‘CSI-Piemonte’, Turin, Italy;

4. Health office, Regional Agency ‘Regione Piemonte’, Turin, Italy

Abstract

We evaluated the benefits of teleconsulting for patients hospitalised with minor head injuries in centres without neurosurgery. In the Piedmont region, 1462 consultation requests were received at specialist centres in 2009, relating to 519 patients with a minor head injury diagnosis (ICD 850–854). These were compared with the details of 1895 patients admitted with the same diagnosis during 2009, but for whom no consultations were requested. The mortality risk in the two groups was estimated using logistic regression, after adjusting for the principal confounding factors (sex, age, seriousness of the patient's injury at diagnosis, referral centre). The estimated risk of death for patients for whom no consultation was requested was an odds ratio of 1.32 (95% CI 1.08 to 1.74) compared to those who received a teleconsultation. However, after adjusting for the confounding factors, the risk was not significant (odds ratio = 1.25, 95% CI 0.83 to 1.91). A stratified analysis identified a significant effect for elderly people, aged over 70 years, in whom the odds ratio was 1.14 (95% CI 1.04 to 1.82). The results confirm the benefits of telemedicine, in particular for elderly patients, when teleconsultation is requested in the case of minor head injury.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Informatics

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