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Provider confidence in the telemedicine spine evaluation: results from a global study

Authors :
Gary Michael Mallow
Mohammad El-Sharkawi
Melvin C. Makhni
Daniel M. Sciubba
Marcelo Valacco
Sravisht Iyer
Jason Pui Yin Cheung
Marko H. Neva
Michael H. McCarthy
Philip K. Louie
Niccole Germscheid
Frank M. Phillips
Norman B. Chutkan
Francis Lovecchio
Grant J. Riew
Howard S. An
Dino Samartzis
Source :
European Spine Journal
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

PurposeTo utilize data from a global spine surgeon survey to elucidate (1) overall confidence in the telemedicine evaluation and (2) determinants of provider confidence.MethodsMembers of AO Spine International were sent a survey encompassing participant’s experience with, perception of, and comparison of telemedicine to in-person visits. The survey was designed through a Delphi approach, with four rounds of question review by the multi-disciplinary authors. Data were stratified by provider age, experience, telemedicine platform, trust in telemedicine, and specialty.ResultsFour hundred and eighty-five surgeons participated in the survey. The global effort included respondents from Africa (19.9%), Asia Pacific (19.7%), Europe (24.3%), North America (9.4%), and South America (26.6%). Providers felt that physical exam-based tasks (e.g., provocative testing, assessing neurologic deficits/myelopathy, etc.) were inferior to in-person exams, while communication-based aspects (e.g., history taking, imaging review, etc.) were equivalent. Participants who performed greater than 50 visits were more likely to believe telemedicine was at least equivalent to in-person visits in the ability to make an accurate diagnosis (OR 2.37, 95% C.I. 1.03–5.43). Compared to in-person encounters, video (versus phone only) visits were associated with increased confidence in the ability of telemedicine to formulate and communicate a treatment plan (OR 3.88, 95% C.I. 1.71–8.84).ConclusionSpine surgeons are confident in the ability of telemedicine to communicate with patients, but are concerned about its capacity to accurately make physical exam-based diagnoses. Future research should concentrate on standardizing the remote examination and the development of appropriate use criteria in order to increase provider confidence in telemedicine technology.

Details

ISSN :
14320932
Volume :
30
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European spine journal : official publication of the European Spine Society, the European Spinal Deformity Society, and the European Section of the Cervical Spine Research Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....45c9e40aad01deea164033e693c18bdf