From the Journals

Tool in development aims to steer telehealth visit appropriateness in rheumatology


 

FROM ARTHRITIS CARE AND RESEARCH

Focus model to specific diagnoses or many?

Currently, clinicians who are already juggling many other responsibilities throughout the day must use their own judgment to determine whether telemedicine may be appropriate. A model such as this could help alleviate that decision burden, said Kathleen Fear, PhD, the director of data and analytics at the University of Rochester Medical Center Health Lab, in New York.

“A model that can help with scheduling or prompt a provider or patient for when a visit is appropriate for telemedicine seems like a really effective way to make the most of telemedicine while reducing potential burden on providers,” she said.

Dr. Leverenz imagines that this model could be embedded into electronic health records as a “decision support tool” to aid discussions between patients and providers on whether telehealth might be appropriate for upcoming visits.

But developing a model that can generate predictions for the wide variety of conditions seen in daily rheumatology practice can be a challenge, said Christine Peoples, MD, a clinical associate professor of medicine and director of the tele-rheumatology program at the University of Pittsburgh.

Dr. Christine Peoples, clinical assistant professor of medicine at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center

Dr. Christine Peoples

“If you focus the model to certain diagnoses, at least in the beginning, that’s very helpful, because it’s too difficult to have one model for every single reason that folks see a rheumatologist,” she said.

Daniel A. Albert, MD, a professor of medicine and pediatrics at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth in Hanover, N,H., agreed. The model is “a good start,” he said, and highlights that tele-rheumatology continues to be underutilized in practice. But he argued that the moderate agreement found with the model was relatively low.

Dr. Daniel Albert

Dr. Daniel Albert

A more focused algorithm that targets a single or several more common conditions may be more accurate, he said. “You probably want to break it down,” Dr. Albert said.

But Dr. Leverenz argued that the novelty of this model is that it incorporates the many different conditions seen in daily rheumatology practice, whereas previous programs utilizing telehealth focused on specific conditions and patients with low disease activity.

In addition, the model is currently provider centric and does not take patient preference into account, Dr. Albert added. Dr. Leverenz said that that is the next step in further developing this model. He is currently conducting qualitative analyses with patients to better understand what patients think and how often their views on telehealth differ from that of their care providers.

“Hopefully, we can expand appropriate telehealth visits by teaching providers not just to do what they think is right for the patient but also meet the patient’s expectations and needs, based on what we learn,” he said.

The study was funded by a grant from Pfizer. Dr. Leverenz has received grants from Pfizer and has served as a consultant for Sanofi. None of the study’s other authors report relevant financial relationships. Dr. Peoples is an educational consultant on telehealth for Pfizer. Dr. Alberts has previously received grant funding from Pfizer. Dr. Fear has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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