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Pediatric Critical Care Telemedicine in Community Emergency Departments David McSwain, MD MPH Pediatric Critical Care Medicine Medical Director, MUSC Inpatient and Emergency Teleconsultation
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Access to Subspecialty Care Only 3% of pediatric critical care physicians practice in rural areas. The vast majority of ED visits by children are made to general hospitals. 1 Children make up 27% of all ED visits nationwide. Only 6% of ED’s in the US have all the necessary pediatric supplies. Only half have even 85% of necessary supplies. Critically ill patients transferred from outlying facilities have worse outcomes (mechanical ventilation, inotropes, PICU length of stay) compared to patients admitted from the same facility. 2 1.Institute of Medicine. 2006. Academic Emergency Medicine. 13(10) 2.Gregory et al. 2009. Pediatrics. 121(4): e906-e911
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The Problem Hours can elapse from the time a community facility calls for assistance and the time a subspecialist sees a critically ill child. Assessing the acuity of injury or illness and determining appropriate pre-transfer interventions in a child over the telephone is at times extremely difficult. This can create an extraordinarily stressful experience for the patient, patient’s family, and the involved providers.
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MUSC Pediatric Emergency and Critical Care Telemedicine Program (PECCT) $525,943 Duke Endowment grant for three years Pediatric emergency medicine and critical care physicians will be available 24/7 through the telemedicine program. Program designed to serve as foundation for future telemedicine programs – Utilizes standard communication platforms to maximize adaptability – Focusing on integrating existing telemedicine programs at MUSC into a unified system – Goal is to optimize the ease of implementation for new and developing programs
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Pilot Facilities Waccamaw Community Hospital Conway Medical Center
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Telemedicine Units
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Peripherals
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Pilot Facility Status Conway – Utilized credentialing-by-proxy – Program fully implemented in May 2014 Georgetown/Waccamaw – Initially used traditional credentialing – Now proceeding with credentialing-by-proxy – Revision of hospital bylaws pending Colleton – Utilizing traditional credentialing – Credentialing still in progress
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Referral/Transfer Data Collecting data on all calls for pediatric emergency medicine or critical care for transfer or consultation. Since April 2012 – 776 records – 432 surveys completed 424 did not use telemedicine 8 used telemedicine
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Location at Referring Site 633 (89.5%) 28 (4.0%) 21 (3.0%) 16 (2.3%) 9 (1.3%)
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Patient Transferred to MUSC? 25 transported patients (7.3%) could have been managed at referring facility 8 telemedicine consults – 1 patient not transferred (12.5%) Facial burn. Would have been transferred if not for telemedicine. – The following is NOT statistically significant!! – NNT to avoid one transport: 9.5 98.0% 2.0%
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Initial Transport Destination 23 (10.5%) non-TM patients could have been triaged to a lower level of care – 12 to Intermediate – 11 to Floor Three of eight telemedicine patients transferred to PICU – 1 not transferred – 3 to MUSC ED (then floor) – 1 to Intermediate – All triage decisions felt to be appropriate in retrospect Use of telemedicine influenced triage decision in 50% of cases 37.4% 47.1% 13.5% 2.1%
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Transportation Helicopter: 27.6% Ground because unable to fly: 9.5% Ground: 58.4% Fixed-wing: 0.7% Private Vehicle: 3.8% Incorrect mode of transport for 25 patients (6.5%) – Five ground transports should have gone via air – 17 air transports should have gone by ground Telemedicine consults: 3 ground, 1 unable to fly, 3 helicopter – All three ground transports would have been by helicopter if not for telemedicine – All transport decisions judged to be appropriate in retrospect
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Telemedicine Quality OverallDiagnosisRespiratoryCardiacNeurologic Telephone3.94.34.24.34.1 Telemedicine54.8555 Scale: 1 = “very poor”, 5 = “excellent” In all eight cases, examiners stated that telemedicine “improved” (2) or “greatly improved (6) the overall quality of the initial consult.
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Telemedicine Vignettes Teenager with near-drowning – Gathered information during arterial line placement by ED physician Infant with SVT – Diagnosis and management with cardiology fellow Toddler with AMS – Directly observed lumbar puncture Teenager with rash and fever – Ruled out TSS and confirmed stability for intermediate care Toddler with ataxia – Lengthy discussion with parents involving PICU and ED physicians Child with facial burn – Management recommendations provided and child discharged home
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Access to Subspecialty Care Percent of population below poverty level – Georgetown County: 21% – Horry County: 22% – Colleton County: 21% Percent of pediatric patients hospitalized at MUSC – Georgetown County: 28% – Horry County: 24% – Colleton County: 51% ED/PICU calls September 1, 2012 – August 31, 2013 – Georgetown Memorial Hospital: 37 – Waccamaw Medical Center: 32 – Colleton Medical Center: 33 – Conway Medical Center: 24 – All facilities: 467 – Four pilot facilities accounted for 27% of calls – Number not transferred: 25 (5%)
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Referral Sites Beaufort Memorial Hospital (78, 10.1%) Bon Secours Saint Francis Hospital (16, 2.1%) Clarendon Memorial Hospital (12, 1.6%) Colleton Medical Center (39, 5.1%) Conway Medical Center (48, 6.2%) East Cooper Regional Medical Center (16, 2.1%) Georgetown Memorial Hospital (49, 6.3%) Grand Strand Regional Medical Center (51, 6.6%) Greenville Memorial Hospital (14, 1.8%) Hampton Regional Medical Center (11, 1.4%) Hilton Head Medical Center and Clinics (15, 1.9%) McLeod Health - Florence (20, 2.6%) Moncks Corner Medical Center (22, 2.8%) Nason Medical Center (9, 1.2%) Orangeburg Regional Hospital (11, 1.4%) Palmetto Health Richland (10, 1.3%) Roper Berkeley Day Hospital (21, 2.7%) Southstrand Ambulatory Care (9, 1.2%) Summerville Medical Center (93, 12.0%) Trident Medical Center (47, 6.1%) Waccamaw Medical Center (47, 6.1%) Williamsburg Regional Hospital (8, 1.0%) Coastal Carolina Medical Center (8, 1.0%)
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Disposition from MUSC ED
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