• Telemed J E Health · Mar 2013

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    Telemedicine pre-anesthesia evaluation: a randomized pilot trial.

    • Richard L Applegate, Brett Gildea, Rebecca Patchin, James L Rook, Brent Wolford, Janice Nyirady, Terry-Ann Dawes, John Faltys, Davinder S Ramsingh, and Gary Stier.
    • Department of Anesthesiology, Loma Linda University School of Medicine, Loma Linda, California 92350, USA. rapplegate@llu.edu
    • Telemed J E Health. 2013 Mar 1;19(3):211-6.

    ObjectivePre-anesthesia evaluation allows discovery of conditions affecting perioperative planning, but when inadequate it may be associated with delays, cancellations, and preventable adverse events. Not all patients who could benefit will keep appointments. Telemedicine pre-anesthesia evaluation may provide for safe patient care while reducing patient inconvenience and cost. Herein we investigate the impact of telemedicine pre-anesthesia evaluation on perioperative processes.Subjects And MethodsThis was a single-center prospective randomized trial in 200 adults scheduled for head and neck surgery at Loma Linda University Medical Center, Loma Linda, CA. Consenting patients not meeting criteria for telephone pre-anesthesia evaluation were randomly assigned to the in-person or telemedicine group. The primary outcome measure was inadequate evaluation caused surgical delay or cancellation. Secondary measures included prediction of difficult airway management and concordance of physical examination.ResultsAfter consent, 40 patients met criteria for telephone screening. Five patients canceled surgery, none for inadequate pre-anesthesia evaluation; thus 155 were randomized. Delay occurred in 1 telemedicine patient awaiting results performed outside our system. Missing documentation at the time of the visit was less common for telemedicine. Difficult airway management was predicted equally but had low positive predictive value. Heart and lung examinations were highly concordant with day of surgery documentation. Patients and providers were highly satisfied with both evaluation modalities.ConclusionsTelemedicine and in-person evaluations were equivalent, with high patient and provider satisfaction. Telemedicine provides potential patient time and cost saving benefits without more day of surgery delay in our system. A prospective trial of patients from multiple surgical specialty clinics is warranted.

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