Author: Wienhold, Jan; Mösch, Lucas; Rossaint, Rolf; Kemper, Ilka; Derwall, Matthias; Czaplik, Michael; Follmann, Andreas
Title: Teleconsultation for pre-operative evaluation during the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic: A technical and medical feasibility study. Cord-id: xhjc07ip Document date: 2021_10_19
ID: xhjc07ip
Snippet: BACKGROUND During the surge in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infections in early 2020, many medical organisations began developing strategies for implementing teleconsultation to maintain medical services during lockdown and to limit physical contact. Therefore, we developed a teleconsultation for preoperative evaluation platform to replace on-site preoperative meetings. OBJECTIVE This study assessed the feasibility of a teleconsultation for pre-operative evaluation and procedure-associate
Document: BACKGROUND During the surge in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infections in early 2020, many medical organisations began developing strategies for implementing teleconsultation to maintain medical services during lockdown and to limit physical contact. Therefore, we developed a teleconsultation for preoperative evaluation platform to replace on-site preoperative meetings. OBJECTIVE This study assessed the feasibility of a teleconsultation for pre-operative evaluation and procedure-associated adverse events. DESIGN Implementation study. SETTING A tertiary care university hospital in Germany from April 2020 to October 2020. PATIENTS One hundred and eleven patients scheduled for elective surgery. INTERVENTION Patients were assigned to receive teleconsultation for preoperative evaluation and to complete a subsequent survey. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Primary endpoints were medical and technical feasibility, user satisfaction and time savings. RESULTS For 100 out of 111 patients, telepre-operative consultations allowed for adequate peri-operative risk assessment and patient education and also for effective collection of legal signatures. For six patients (5.4%), consultations could not be started because of technical issues, whereas for five patients (4.8%), clearance for surgery could not be granted because of medical reasons. A clear majority of anaesthetists (93.7%) rated the telepre-operative evaluations as equivalent to on-site meetings. The majority of the patients considered teleconsultation for preoperative evaluation as convenient as an on-site meeting (98.2%) and would choose a teleconsultation again (97.9%). Median travel time saved by patients was 60 min (Q1 40, Q3 80). We registered one adverse event: we detected atrial fibrillation in one patient only immediately prior to surgery. CONCLUSION Telepre-operative evaluations are medically and technically feasible, yielding high satisfaction rates on both sides. However, regarding patient safety, not every patient is equally well suited. Overall, implementation of teleconsultation for preoperative evaluation into clinical routine could help maintain medical care during the COVID-19 pandemic. TRIAL REGISTRATION NCT04518514, ClinicalTrials.gov.
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