Telemedicine Facilitation of Transfer Coordination From Emergency Departments

被引:11
|
作者
Hayden, Emily M. [1 ]
Boggs, Krislyn M. [1 ]
Espinola, Janice A. [1 ]
Camargo, Carlos A., Jr. [1 ]
Zachrison, Kori S. [1 ]
机构
[1] Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Dept Emergency Med, Boston, MA 02114 USA
关键词
MORTALITY;
D O I
10.1016/j.annemergmed.2020.04.027
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100602 ;
摘要
Study objective: Interhospital transfers are costly to patients and to the health care system. The use of telemedicine may enable more efficient systems by decreasing transfers or diverting transfers from crowded referral emergency departments (EDs) to alternative appropriate facilities. Our primary objective is to describe the prevalence of telemedicine for transfer coordination among US EDs, the ways in which it is used, and characteristics of EDs that use telemedicine for transfer coordination. Methods: We used the 2016 National Emergency Department Inventory-USA survey to identify telemedicine-using EDs. We then surveyed all EDs using telemedicine for transfer coordination and a sample of EDs using telemedicine for other clinical applications. We used a multivariable logistic regression model to identify characteristics independently associated with use of telemedicine for transfer coordination. Results: Of the 5,375 EDs open in 2016, 4,507 responded to National Emergency Department Inventory-USA (84%). Only 146 EDs used telemedicine for transfer coordination; of these, 79 (54%) used telemedicine to assist with clinical care for local admission, 117 (80%) to assist with care before transfer, and 92 (63%) for arranging transfer to a different hospital. Among telemedicine-using EDs, lower ED annual visit volume (odds ratio 5.87, 95% CI 2.79 to 12.36) was independently associated with use of telemedicine for transfer coordination. Conclusion: Although telemedicine has potential to improve efficiency of regional emergency care systems, it is infrequently used for coordination of transfer between EDs. When used, it is most often to assist with clinical care before transfer.
引用
收藏
页码:602 / 608
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Telemedicine-Assisted Intubation in Rural Emergency Departments: A National Emergency Airway Registry Study
    Van Oeveren, Lucas
    Donner, Julie
    Fantegrossi, Andrea
    Mohr, Nicholas M.
    Brown, Calvin A., III
    [J]. TELEMEDICINE AND E-HEALTH, 2017, 23 (04) : 290 - 297
  • [22] A Retrospective Study of Children Transferred from General Emergency Departments to a Pediatric Emergency Department: Which Transfers Are Potentially Amenable to Telemedicine?
    Varma, Selina
    Schinasi, Dana A.
    Ponczek, Jacqueline
    Baca, Jacqueline
    Simon, Norma-Jean E.
    Foster, Carolyn C.
    Davis, Matthew M.
    Macy, Michelle
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS, 2021, 230 : 126 - +
  • [23] Patient coordination in emergency departments using visualization of operation behavior
    Bengtsson, Kristofer
    Lennartson, Bengt
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2013 IEEE SYMPOSIUM ON COMPUTATIONAL INTELLIGENCE IN HEALTHCARE AND E-HEALTH (CICARE), 2013, : 58 - 63
  • [24] THE USE OF TELEMEDICINE TO TEACH RESUSCITATION OF CRITICALLY ILL CHILDREN TO RURAL EMERGENCY DEPARTMENTS
    Salerno, Richard
    Toohey, Donna
    Gacioch, Brian
    Callas, Peter
    [J]. CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2009, 37 (12) : A285 - A285
  • [25] Transfer from residential aged care to emergency departments: an analysis of patient outcomes
    Arendts, G.
    Dickson, C.
    Howard, K.
    Quine, S.
    [J]. INTERNAL MEDICINE JOURNAL, 2012, 42 (01) : 75 - 82
  • [26] Acute stroke patients benefit from emergency transfer within a telemedicine stroke network
    Kepplinger, J.
    Dzialowski, I.
    Puetz, V.
    Hentschel, H.
    Schneider, H.
    Wolz, M.
    Schultheiss, T.
    Gahn, G.
    Schackert, G.
    von Kummer, R.
    Reichmann, H.
    Bodechtel, U.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY, 2011, 258 : 35 - 35
  • [27] Acute Stroke Patients Benefit from Emergency Transfer within a Telemedicine Stroke Network
    Kepplinger, Jessica
    Dzialowski, Imanuel
    Puetz, Volker
    Lautenschlaeger, Christiane
    Hentschel, Hjoerdis
    Schneider, Hauke
    Wolz, Martin
    Schultheiss, Thorsten
    Schackert, Gabriele
    von Kummer, Ruediger
    Becker, Ulf
    [J]. STROKE, 2011, 42 (03) : E293 - E293
  • [28] TELEmedicine as an intervention for sepsis in emergency departments: a multicenter, comparative effectiveness study (TELEvISED Study)
    Mohr, Nicholas M.
    Harland, Karisa K.
    Okoro, Uche E.
    Fuller, Brian M.
    Campbell, Kalyn
    Swanson, Morgan B.
    Simpson, Stephen Q.
    Parker, Edith A.
    Mack, Luke J.
    Bell, Amanda
    DeJong, Katie
    Faine, Brett
    Zepeski, Anne
    Mueller, Keith
    Chrischilles, Elizabeth
    Carpenter, Christopher R.
    Jones, Michael P.
    Ward, Marcia M.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE EFFECTIVENESS RESEARCH, 2021, 10 (02) : 77 - 91
  • [29] The role of telemedicine services in changing users' intentions for presenting to the emergency departments in Saudi Arabia
    Alfaleh, Amjad
    Alkattan, Abdullah
    Alageel, Alaa
    Salah, Mohammed
    Almutairi, Mona
    Sagor, Khlood
    Alabdulkareem, Khaled
    [J]. DIGITAL HEALTH, 2022, 8
  • [30] The Significance of Care Coordination for Older People Presenting to Hospital Emergency Departments
    Corbett, Helen
    Lim, Kwang
    Elkins, Ann
    [J]. AUSTRALASIAN JOURNAL ON AGEING, 2003, 22 (04) : 39 - 39