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P39. Telehealth and spine care: Surgeon experiences and perceptions.

Authors :
Riew, Grant
Lovecchio, Francis C.
Samartzis, Dino
Louie, Philip
McCarthy, Michael H.
Makhni, Melvin C.
Iyer, Sravisht
Source :
Spine Journal. 2021 Supplement, Vol. 21 Issue 9, pS159-S159. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Telehealth use in spine surgery has become widespread due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The degree of global adoption remains unknown. To our knowledge, this is the first global survey to directly evaluate provider perspectives surrounding telemedicine use-cases. To elicit the extent of adoption of international spine telehealth. We aimed to explore telemedicine platform used, ease of use, and acceptable use-cases. Cross-sectional email survey, international. Spine Surgeons. Perspectives and practices of spine telemedicine. An anonymous, cross-sectional email survey was sent to the members of AO Spine. Survey questions covered provider experiences with and perceptions of telemedicine. Descriptive statistics were used to depict responses and responses were compared amongst regions. A total of 485 spine providers responded to the survey. As of May 2020, telemedicine usage comprised >39.0% of all visits — up from <10.0% of visits pre-pandemic. A majority of providers (60.5%) performed at least 1 telemedicine visit. The format of "telemedicine" varied widely by region: African (45.2%) and European (50.0%) providers were more likely to use phone calls (no video), whereas North (66.7%) and South American (77.0%) surgeons more commonly used audio-visual telemedicine (p<0.001). North American providers used telemedicine the most during COVID-19 (>60.0% of all visits). There were 81.9% of all providers who "agreed/strongly agreed" telemedicine was easy to use. Respondents tended to "agree" that imaging review, the initial appointment, and postoperative care could be performed using telemedicine. Almost all (95.4%) surgeons preferred at least one in-person visit prior to the day of surgery. Our study noted significant geographical differences in the rate of telemedicine usage and the platform of telemedicine utilized. Spine surgeons found telemedicine feasible for imaging review, initial visits, and follow-up visits although the vast majority still preferred at least one in-person preoperative visit. This abstract does not discuss or include any applicable devices or drugs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15299430
Volume :
21
Issue :
9
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Spine Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
151834274
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.spinee.2021.05.247