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Telehealth Policy, Practice, and Education: a Position Statement of the Society of General Internal Medicine
Telehealth services, specifically telemedicine audio-video and audio-only patient encounters, expanded dramatically during the COVID-19 pandemic through temporary waivers and flexibilities tied to the public health emergency. Early studies demonstrate significant potential to advance the quintuple a...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Springer International Publishing
2023
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10124932/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37095331 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11606-023-08190-8 |
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author | Chen, Anders Ayub, Mariam H. Mishuris, Rebecca G. Rodriguez, Jorge A. Gwynn, Kendrick Lo, Margaret C. Noronha, Craig Henry, Tracey L. Jones, Danielle Lee, Wei Wei Varma, Malvika Cuevas, Elizabeth Onumah, Chavon Gupta, Reena Goodson, John Lu, Amy D. Syed, Quratulain Suen, Leslie W. Heiman, Erica Salhi, Bisan A. Khoong, Elaine C. Schmidt, Stacie |
author_facet | Chen, Anders Ayub, Mariam H. Mishuris, Rebecca G. Rodriguez, Jorge A. Gwynn, Kendrick Lo, Margaret C. Noronha, Craig Henry, Tracey L. Jones, Danielle Lee, Wei Wei Varma, Malvika Cuevas, Elizabeth Onumah, Chavon Gupta, Reena Goodson, John Lu, Amy D. Syed, Quratulain Suen, Leslie W. Heiman, Erica Salhi, Bisan A. Khoong, Elaine C. Schmidt, Stacie |
author_sort | Chen, Anders |
collection | PubMed |
description | Telehealth services, specifically telemedicine audio-video and audio-only patient encounters, expanded dramatically during the COVID-19 pandemic through temporary waivers and flexibilities tied to the public health emergency. Early studies demonstrate significant potential to advance the quintuple aim (patient experience, health outcomes, cost, clinician well-being, and equity). Supported well, telemedicine can particularly improve patient satisfaction, health outcomes, and equity. Implemented poorly, telemedicine can facilitate unsafe care, worsen disparities, and waste resources. Without further action from lawmakers and agencies, payment will end for many telemedicine services currently used by millions of Americans at the end of 2024. Policymakers, health systems, clinicians, and educators must decide how to support, implement, and sustain telemedicine, and long-term studies and clinical practice guidelines are emerging to provide direction. In this position statement, we use clinical vignettes to review relevant literature and highlight where key actions are needed. These include areas where telemedicine must be expanded (e.g., to support chronic disease management) and where guidelines are needed (e.g., to prevent inequitable offering of telemedicine services and prevent unsafe or low-value care). We provide policy, clinical practice, and education recommendations for telemedicine on behalf of the Society of General Internal Medicine. Policy recommendations include ending geographic and site restrictions, expanding the definition of telemedicine to include audio-only services, establishing appropriate telemedicine service codes, and expanding broadband access to all Americans. Clinical practice recommendations include ensuring appropriate telemedicine use (for limited acute care situations or in conjunction with in-person services to extend longitudinal care relationships), that the choice of modality be done through patient-clinician shared decision-making, and that health systems design telemedicine services through community partnerships to ensure equitable implementation. Education recommendations include developing telemedicine-specific educational strategies for trainees that align with accreditation body competencies and providing educators with protected time and faculty development resources. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s11606-023-08190-8. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-10124932 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2023 |
publisher | Springer International Publishing |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-101249322023-04-25 Telehealth Policy, Practice, and Education: a Position Statement of the Society of General Internal Medicine Chen, Anders Ayub, Mariam H. Mishuris, Rebecca G. Rodriguez, Jorge A. Gwynn, Kendrick Lo, Margaret C. Noronha, Craig Henry, Tracey L. Jones, Danielle Lee, Wei Wei Varma, Malvika Cuevas, Elizabeth Onumah, Chavon Gupta, Reena Goodson, John Lu, Amy D. Syed, Quratulain Suen, Leslie W. Heiman, Erica Salhi, Bisan A. Khoong, Elaine C. Schmidt, Stacie J Gen Intern Med Position Papers Telehealth services, specifically telemedicine audio-video and audio-only patient encounters, expanded dramatically during the COVID-19 pandemic through temporary waivers and flexibilities tied to the public health emergency. Early studies demonstrate significant potential to advance the quintuple aim (patient experience, health outcomes, cost, clinician well-being, and equity). Supported well, telemedicine can particularly improve patient satisfaction, health outcomes, and equity. Implemented poorly, telemedicine can facilitate unsafe care, worsen disparities, and waste resources. Without further action from lawmakers and agencies, payment will end for many telemedicine services currently used by millions of Americans at the end of 2024. Policymakers, health systems, clinicians, and educators must decide how to support, implement, and sustain telemedicine, and long-term studies and clinical practice guidelines are emerging to provide direction. In this position statement, we use clinical vignettes to review relevant literature and highlight where key actions are needed. These include areas where telemedicine must be expanded (e.g., to support chronic disease management) and where guidelines are needed (e.g., to prevent inequitable offering of telemedicine services and prevent unsafe or low-value care). We provide policy, clinical practice, and education recommendations for telemedicine on behalf of the Society of General Internal Medicine. Policy recommendations include ending geographic and site restrictions, expanding the definition of telemedicine to include audio-only services, establishing appropriate telemedicine service codes, and expanding broadband access to all Americans. Clinical practice recommendations include ensuring appropriate telemedicine use (for limited acute care situations or in conjunction with in-person services to extend longitudinal care relationships), that the choice of modality be done through patient-clinician shared decision-making, and that health systems design telemedicine services through community partnerships to ensure equitable implementation. Education recommendations include developing telemedicine-specific educational strategies for trainees that align with accreditation body competencies and providing educators with protected time and faculty development resources. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s11606-023-08190-8. Springer International Publishing 2023-04-24 2023-08 /pmc/articles/PMC10124932/ /pubmed/37095331 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11606-023-08190-8 Text en © This is a U.S. Government work and not under copyright protection in the US; foreign copyright protection may apply 2023 |
spellingShingle | Position Papers Chen, Anders Ayub, Mariam H. Mishuris, Rebecca G. Rodriguez, Jorge A. Gwynn, Kendrick Lo, Margaret C. Noronha, Craig Henry, Tracey L. Jones, Danielle Lee, Wei Wei Varma, Malvika Cuevas, Elizabeth Onumah, Chavon Gupta, Reena Goodson, John Lu, Amy D. Syed, Quratulain Suen, Leslie W. Heiman, Erica Salhi, Bisan A. Khoong, Elaine C. Schmidt, Stacie Telehealth Policy, Practice, and Education: a Position Statement of the Society of General Internal Medicine |
title | Telehealth Policy, Practice, and Education: a Position Statement of the Society of General Internal Medicine |
title_full | Telehealth Policy, Practice, and Education: a Position Statement of the Society of General Internal Medicine |
title_fullStr | Telehealth Policy, Practice, and Education: a Position Statement of the Society of General Internal Medicine |
title_full_unstemmed | Telehealth Policy, Practice, and Education: a Position Statement of the Society of General Internal Medicine |
title_short | Telehealth Policy, Practice, and Education: a Position Statement of the Society of General Internal Medicine |
title_sort | telehealth policy, practice, and education: a position statement of the society of general internal medicine |
topic | Position Papers |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10124932/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37095331 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11606-023-08190-8 |
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