4.7 Article

Appropriate Use of Telehealth Visits in Endocrinology: Policy Perspective of the Endocrine Society

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Volume 107, Issue 11, Pages 2953-2962

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/clinem/dgac494

Keywords

telehealth; telemedicine; consensus statement; guidelines; endocrinology; virtual care; policy perspective

Funding

  1. United States Department of Veterans Affairs Health Services Research & Development Service of the VA Office of Research and Development [1I21HX003268-01A1, IK2 HX-002137-01]
  2. National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R37CA272473]
  3. Arkansas Biosciences Institute
  4. major research component of the Arkansas Tobacco Settlement Proceeds Act of 2000
  5. Lilly, Inc.
  6. National Institute for Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, NIH [K23D K125671]

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This study summarizes the factors determining the appropriateness of telehealth use in endocrinology, covering aspects such as clinical, patient, patient-clinician relationship, clinician, and health care setting and technology. Strategies to improve the quality of telehealth care are also discussed.
Objective This work aims to guide clinicians practicing endocrinology in the use of telehealth (synchronous patient-clinician visits conducted over video or telephone) for outpatient care. Participants The Endocrine Society convened a 9-member panel of US endocrinologists with expertise in telehealth clinical care, telehealth operations, patient-centered care, health care delivery research, and/or evidence-based medicine. Evidence The panel conducted a literature search to identify studies published since 2000 about telehealth in endocrinology. One member extracted a list of factors affecting the quality of endocrine care via telehealth from the extant literature. The panel grouped these factors into 5 domains: clinical, patient, patient-clinician relationship, clinician, and health care setting and technology. Consensus Process For each domain, 2 or 3 members drew on existing literature and their expert opinions to draft a section examining the effect of the domain's component factors on the appropriateness of telehealth use within endocrine practice. Appropriateness was evaluated in the context of the 6 Institute of Medicine aims for health care quality: patient-centeredness, equity, safety, effectiveness, timeliness, and efficiency. The panel held monthly virtual meetings to discuss and revise each domain. Two members wrote the remaining sections and integrated them with the domains to create the full policy perspective, which was reviewed and revised by all members. Conclusions Telehealth has become a common care modality within endocrinology. This policy perspective summarizes the factors determining telehealth appropriateness in various patient care scenarios. Strategies to increase the quality of telehealth care are offered. More research is needed to develop a robust evidence base for future guideline development.

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