• Burns · Nov 2016

    Telehealth for paediatric burn patients in rural areas: a retrospective audit of activity and cost savings.

    • Tania McWilliams, Joyce Hendricks, Di Twigg, Fiona Wood, and Margaret Giles.
    • Princess Margaret Hospital for Children, Total Care Burns Unit, Roberts Road, Subiaco 6008 WA, Australia; Edith Cowan University, School of Nursing & Midwifery, 270 Joondalup Drive, Joondalup 6027 WA, Australia. Electronic address: Tania.McWilliams@health.wa.gov.au.
    • Burns. 2016 Nov 1; 42 (7): 1487-1493.

    IntroductionSince 2005, the Western Australian paediatric burn unit has provided a state-wide clinical consultancy and support service for the assessment and management of acute and rehabilitative burn patients via its telehealth service. Since then, the use of this telehealth service has steadily increased as it has become imbedded in the model of care for paediatric burn patients. Primarily, the service involves acute and long term patient reviews conducted by the metropolitan-located burn unit in contact with health practitioners, advising patients and their families who reside outside the metropolitan area thereby avoiding unnecessary transfers and inpatient bed days. A further benefit of the paediatric burn service using telehealth is more efficient use of tertiary level burn unit beds, with only those patients meeting clinical criteria for admission being transferred.AimTo conduct a retrospective audit of avoided transfers and bed days in 2005/06-2012/13 as a result of the use of the paediatric Burns Telehealth Service and estimate their cost savings in 2012/13.MethodA retrospective chart audit identified activity, avoided unnecessary acute and scar review patient transfers, inpatient bed days and their associated avoided costs to the tertiary burn unit and patient travel funding.ResultsOver the period 2005/06-2012/13 the audit identified 4,905 avoided inpatient bed days, 364 avoided acute patient transfers and 1,763 avoided follow up review transfers for a total of 1,312 paediatric burn patients as a result of this telehealth service. This paper presents the derivation of these outcomes and an estimation of their cost savings in 2012/13 of AUD 1.89million.ConclusionThis study demonstrates avoided patient transfers, inpatient bed days and associated costs as the result of an integrated burns telehealth service.Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd and ISBI. All rights reserved.

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