Telemedicine Critical Care in Rural Hospitals During the COVID-19 Pandemic

M. Bursey, M. Lyon
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Abstract

RATIONALE: The COVID-19 pandemic has caused urban and suburban hospitals to exceed their inpatient capacities, often requiring long periods of transfer diversion. This has had a dramatic impact on the rural hospitals of Georgia by forcing those facilities to care for critically ill patients that would have normally been transferred to referral hospitals for higher levels of care. Many rural facilities have the equipment to care for critically ill patients, but lack physicians trained and experienced in the management of critical illness. To mitigate this, Augusta University (AU) instituted a telemedicine program to provide critical care services to rural hospitals while keeping patients in their rural communities for optimal family and social support. METHODS: The telemedicine critical care program was started in three rural hospitals, but rapidly expanded to three more hospitals based on initial successes. These sites are staffed predominately by primary care physicians with no critical care trained physicians available. Telemedicine services were provided by AU Emergency Physicians with a Critical Care trained physician providing medical oversight. Telemedicine consults were initiated either in the ED or after the patient was admitted to the hospital. Evaluations were continued daily until the patient was discharged, transferred, or transitioned to comfort care. If a patient's care requirements exceeded the capability of a rural site despite critical care telemedicine involvement, AU accepted all transfers regardless of diversion status. RESULTS: From July 20, 2020 through December 20, 2020, 213 patients were evaluated and treated using the telemedicine program. The average length of consultation was 5.1 days. 70.0% of patients were discharged from the rural facilities and 10.3% were provided end-of-life care without transfer. Only 19.7% were transferred to the tertiary hospital. The transfer rate from the rural hospitals decreased by approximately 80% as compared to prior. Mortality and discharge outcomes amongst patients in the telemedicine program were no worse than those at the tertiary referral center. CONCLUSION: The telemedicine critical care program has been received enthusiastically by the participating rural hospitals, and additional sites are seeking to join. It has allowed these hospitals to safely care for substantially more complex patients while still guaranteeing expeditious transfer in the event local capability is exceeded. This approach provides for enhanced patient care and safety while keeping patients close to their families and communities. It has been instrumental in helping to resolve healthcare disparities between rural and suburban/urban Georgia during the COVID pandemic.
COVID-19大流行期间农村医院远程医疗重症监护
理由:2019冠状病毒病大流行导致城市和郊区医院的住院量超出其住院能力,往往需要长时间转院。这对格鲁吉亚的农村医院产生了巨大影响,迫使这些医院照顾原本会转到转诊医院接受更高级别治疗的危重病人。许多农村设施有护理危重病人的设备,但缺乏在危重疾病管理方面受过培训和经验丰富的医生。为了缓解这种情况,奥古斯塔大学(AU)制定了一项远程医疗计划,为农村医院提供重症护理服务,同时将患者留在农村社区,以获得最佳的家庭和社会支持。方法:远程医疗重症监护项目在三家农村医院启动,但在初步成功的基础上迅速扩展到另外三家医院。这些地点的工作人员主要是初级保健医生,没有受过重症监护训练的医生。远程医疗服务由非盟急诊医师提供,由一名经过重症监护培训的医师提供医疗监督。远程医疗咨询要么在急诊科开始,要么在病人入院后开始。每天继续进行评估,直到患者出院,转移或过渡到舒适护理。如果患者的护理需求超出了农村站点的能力,尽管有重症监护远程医疗参与,非盟接受所有转移,无论转移状态如何。结果:2020年7月20日至2020年12月20日,213例患者使用远程医疗项目进行评估和治疗。平均咨询时间为5.1天。70.0%的患者从农村机构出院,10.3%的患者在没有转院的情况下获得了临终关怀。仅19.7%转至三级医院。与以前相比,从农村医院转院的比率下降了大约80%。远程医疗项目患者的死亡率和出院结果并不比三级转诊中心的患者差。结论:远程医疗危重监护项目在参与的农村医院中反响良好,并有更多的医院寻求加入。它使这些医院能够安全地照顾复杂得多的病人,同时仍然保证在超出当地能力的情况下迅速转移。这种方法提供了更好的患者护理和安全,同时使患者与家人和社区保持密切联系。在COVID大流行期间,它在帮助解决格鲁吉亚农村和郊区/城市之间的医疗保健差距方面发挥了重要作用。
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