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- Jaclin M Labarbera, Miles S Ellenby, Paul Bouressa, Jill Burrell, Heidi R Flori, and James P Marcin.
- 1 Division of Pediatric Critical Care, Department of Pediatrics, University of California , San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
- Telemed J E Health. 2013 Oct 1; 19 (10): 760-6.
BackgroundBecause of centralization of care, pediatric patients often require transfer for subspecialty care. We evaluated the impact of telemedicine critical care consultation and a pediatric hospitalist program on enabling patients to remain at a community hospital.Patients And MethodsThis is a retrospective chart review of pediatric patients at a community hospital receiving critical care consultation from a tertiary children's hospital from January 2006 to October 2009. Patient cohorts differed by modality of intensivist consultation (telephone versus telemedicine) and modality of inpatient ward care at the community hospital (primary care physician versus hospitalist). Patients were compared for differences in transfer rate and rate of diversion from the pediatric intensive care unit to the tertiary ward.ResultsOne hundred fifty-three charts were analyzed: 41 from prior to hospitalist and telemedicine implementation (Cohort 1), 56 from post-implementation of telemedicine but pre-hospitalist program (Cohort 2), and 56 after implementation of both the telemedicine and hospitalist programs (Cohort 3). Baseline data did not differ among cohorts. Transfer rates after intensivist consultation were lower after implementation of telemedicine consultation (100%, 85.7%, and 87.5% in Cohorts 1-3, respectively; p=0.04). The proportion of transferred patients who were diverted to the tertiary ward decreased over time (19.5%, 14.5%, and 6.1% in Cohorts 1-3, respectively; p=0.003).ConclusionsTelemedicine consultation between pediatric intensivists and community hospital physicians combined with a pediatric hospitalist program at the community hospital has the potential to improve triage of pediatric patients and reduce the need to transfer patients.
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