Analyzing telehealth emissions and variations in primary care settings - A scoping review

Rachel de Sain , Amanda Irwin
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Abstract

Introduction

In facing the dual challenge of climate change's health impacts and healthcare's greenhouse gas emissions, telehealth emerges as a promising, low-carbon alternative. While existing literature emphasizes its implications in secondary and acute care, a significant gap exists regarding its impact on primary care emissions.

Methods

This scoping review analyzes 45 studies examining telehealth's impact on emissions, focusing on five studies in primary care settings. Using the Arksey and O'Malley Framework, it aims to understand the calculation methods and average emissions avoided per telehealth consultation in primary care, comparing them to secondary and acute settings.

Results

Results reveal that primary care telehealth emissions savings align with those in secondary and acute settings, mainly stemming from avoided transport emissions (ATE). However, variables to calculate ATE, including distance traveled, public transport, and non-emitting vehicle use, exhibit broader influences, and a model for their calculation will be developed for future studies. The findings of this review draw upon data from over 87 million primary care telehealth consultations across five studies, reporting an average avoided carbon emission of 7.7kg CO2e per consultation. These findings underscore the potential for substantial emissions reduction by transitioning appropriate primary care consultations to virtual delivery platforms.
分析初级保健环境中的远程医疗排放和变化-范围审查
面对气候变化对健康的影响和医疗保健的温室气体排放的双重挑战,远程医疗成为一种有前途的低碳替代方案。虽然现有文献强调其对二级和急性护理的影响,但其对初级保健排放的影响存在显着差距。方法本综述分析了45项研究远程医疗对排放影响的研究,重点关注初级保健机构的5项研究。使用Arksey和O'Malley框架,它旨在了解初级保健中每次远程医疗咨询的计算方法和平均排放量,并将其与二级和急性环境进行比较。结果表明,初级保健远程医疗的减排与二级和急性环境的减排一致,主要源于避免运输排放(ATE)。然而,计算ATE的变量,包括行驶距离、公共交通和非排放车辆的使用,表现出更广泛的影响,将为未来的研究开发计算它们的模型。本次审查的结果利用了五项研究中超过8700万次初级保健远程医疗咨询的数据,报告称每次咨询平均避免了7.7千克二氧化碳当量的碳排放。这些发现强调了通过将适当的初级保健咨询过渡到虚拟交付平台来大幅减少排放的潜力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
The journal of climate change and health
The journal of climate change and health Global and Planetary Change, Public Health and Health Policy
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
0.00%
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0
审稿时长
68 days
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