• J Pain Symptom Manage · Jan 2025

    Review

    How is Telehealth Used to Increase Access to Specialty Palliative Care? A Systematic Review.

    • Rebecca N Hutchinson, Eric J Chiu, Shane C Belin, Michele Klein-Fedyshin, Carolyn R Impagliazzo, Lucia Costanza, Joshua Passarelli, Pooja P Patel, Sumedha Sahay, Allison Shen, Vladislav Razskazovskiy, and Yael Schenker.
    • Division of Palliative Medicine (R.N.H.), MaineHealth Maine Medical Center, Portland, Maine, USA; Tufts University School of Medicine (L.C., J.P., P.P.P., S.S.), Boston, Massachusetts, USA. Electronic address: Becca.Hutchinson@mainehealth.org.
    • J Pain Symptom Manage. 2025 Jan 3.

    ContextSpecialty palliative care remains inaccessible for many with serious illness, especially in rural areas. Telehealth may be one solution.ObjectivesTo describe how telehealth increases access to specialty palliative care, describe facilitators and barriers to its use, and summarize evidence of patient benefits.MethodsWe conducted a systematic review using database-specific vocabulary and Boolean logic focusing on concepts "telemedicine," "remote consultation," "palliative medicine," and "hospice care." Included articles described original research evaluating a telehealth intervention addressing ≥2 National Consensus Project for Quality Palliative Care domains. Two researchers reviewed and abstracted articles; disagreements were resolved by consensus.ResultsOf 13,928 articles identified, 150 were eligible. Of these, 112 involved telemedicine (direct care from a clinician to a patient); 15 involved tele coaching (connection of non-palliative care clinician with a palliative care specialist to increase primary palliative care skills); 16 involved e-health (an app to monitor symptoms); and 7 involved e-consults (connection to a palliative care clinician to advise on a particular case). About two-thirds (65%) of articles were published since 2020. Common barriers included broadband issues, lack of familiarity with technology, and lack of access to a device. Facilitators included having a technology-skilled assistant and providing a device. Few studies assessed patient outcomes.ConclusionWhile telehealth is widely used to increase access to specialty palliative care, more evidence is needed to evaluate effectiveness. Further research is needed to understand how to overcome barriers prominent in rural settings and to optimize integration of multiple modalities of telehealth in specialty palliative care.Copyright © 2025 American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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