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High-Intensity Telemedicine Decreases Emergency Department Use by Senior Living Community Residents

Authors :
Katia Noyes
Kenneth M. McConnochie
Manish N. Shah
Nancy E. Wood
Ann Dozier
Suzanne M. Gillespie
Hongyue Wang
Dallas Nelson
Erin B. Wasserman
Source :
Telemedicine journal and e-health : the official journal of the American Telemedicine Association. 22(3)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

The failure to provide timely acute illness care can lead to adverse consequences or emergency department (ED) use. We evaluated the effect on ED use of a high-intensity telemedicine program that provides acute illness care for senior living community (SLC) residents.We performed a prospective cohort study over 3.5 years. Six SLCs cared for by a primary care geriatrics practice were intervention facilities, with the remaining 16 being controls. Consenting patients at intervention facilities could access telemedicine for acute illness care. Patients were provided patient-to-provider, real-time, or store-and-forward high-intensity telemedicine (i.e., technician-assisted with resources beyond simple videoconferencing) to diagnose and treat acute illnesses. The primary outcome was the rate of ED use.We enrolled 494 of 705 (70.1%) subjects/proxies in the intervention group; 1,058 subjects served as controls. Control and intervention subjects visited the ED 2,238 and 725 times, respectively, with 47.3% of control and 43.4% of intervention group visits resulting in discharge home. Among intervention subjects, ED use decreased at an annualized rate of 18% (rate ratio [RR]=0.82; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.70-0.95), whereas in the control group there was no statistically significant change in ED use (RR=1.01; 95% CI, 0.95-1.07; p=0.009 for group-by-time interaction). Primary care use and mortality were not significantly different.High-intensity telemedicine significantly reduced ED use among SLC residents without increasing other utilization or mortality. This alternative to traditional acute illness care can enhance access to acute illness care and should be integrated into population health programs.

Details

ISSN :
15563669
Volume :
22
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Telemedicine journal and e-health : the official journal of the American Telemedicine Association
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2889cc6ea6c92b168b91b3208d35b92d