How telemedicine may ease ER overcrowding
University of Texas at Dallas
Overcrowding in emergency rooms is a costly and concerning global problem, compromising patient care quality and experience. In a new study, a researcher from The University of Texas at Dallas investigated whether telemedicine could enhance ER care delivery.
"This
longstanding problem is mainly driven by the imbalance between increasing
patient flow and the shortage of emergency room capacity," said Dr.
Shujing Sun, assistant professor of information systems in the Naveen Jindal
School of Management and lead author of the study.
"While
the ER is supposed to be a safety net of the health care system, the
overcrowding problem has strained this safety net and posits various
threats," Sun said. "For example, long waiting times and treatment
delays cause adverse patient outcomes, such as high readmission and mortality
rates. They also increase financial costs, reduce patients' satisfaction and
impair physician efficiency."
In
the study, published online Aug. 27 and in the September print issue of the
INFORMS journal Information Systems Research, Sun and her
colleagues investigated the potential of telemedicine as a generic solution to
reduce ER congestion.
Sun
said telemedicine, defined as the remote delivery of health care services and
clinical information using telecommunications technology, has been gradually
adopted in recent years, but there is little evidence on the impact of its
applications within the ER setting.
"Telemedicine application in the ER has two distinguishing features from home-based telemedicine," Sun said. "First, patients present in the ER. Second, on-site assistance is available to connect patients and off-site physicians throughout the telemedicine service. Off-site physicians can be within the same hospital, in a different hospital, or even at home, as long as they can connect with emergency patients through videoconferencing tools and have access to patients' health records."
According
to the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey, from 2000 to 2015, the
number of ER visits in the U.S. increased 27% from 108 million to nearly 137
million. With the sharp rise in ER visits and critical shortages of emergency
care physicians, ER overcrowding is not abating, particularly as the COVID-19
pandemic strains the capacity of hospitals nationwide.
Using
a large data set covering all emergency visits in New York state from 2010 to
2014, the researchers found that the adoption of telemedicine in the ER
significantly shortened average length of stay and wait time.
ER
telemedicine improves an on-call physician's efficiency through transportation
elimination and smoother workflow, which can shorten a patient's wait for
physicians.
For example, when there is an in?ux of emergency patients, telemedicine enables on-site nurse practitioners or physician assistants to treat patients with minor conditions under the remote supervision of off-site physicians. Sun said this is important because many hospitals require that all patients be seen by an attending physician.
With telemedicine, on-call physicians can work from
their office without traveling to the ER. Having an on-call physician available
through telemedicine also can speed up the ordering of lab work, so that those
processes can start long before they otherwise would, and physicians can pivot
to their administrative tasks more quickly in between visits.
The researchers replicated the analysis using annual U.S. hospital data and found that ER telemedicine adoption significantly reduces average wait times documented in Medicare.gov's Hospital Compare, or the average time a patient spends in the ER before being seen by a health care professional.
That finding
suggests that the reduction in length of stay -- the total time from the first
documented time after arrival at the ER to the time the patient is discharged
from the ER -- partially comes from the reduction of waiting time.
Telemedicine
could achieve greater efficiencies through several channels, Sun said. In
addition to more efficient information exchange, the study showed telemedicine
can significantly improve ER care delivery through flexible resource allocation,
especially when there is a shortage of on-site physician staffing or a hospital
lacks certain expertise.
For
example, whether to administer tissue plasminogen activator after stroke
symptoms is a time-sensitive and complicated medical decision. However, some
hospitals lack such expertise. Through a telestroke program, a type of ER
telemedicine application, on-site emergency physicians can immediately consult
remote stroke specialists to perform real-time diagnoses and recommend
treatment plans in a timely manner.
"Although
the ER seems to be an unlikely place for telemedicine to play its role, it is
happening, and in fact, is very promising," Sun said. "We believe our
findings are critical for ERs, considering the unique setting of unscheduled
arrivals and unpredictability of patient traffic."
It's
important to note that the improvement in care delivery does not come at the
expense of care quality or patient cost, Sun said.
The
study provides health care decision-makers with a careful examination of the
causal implications of ER telemedicine on care delivery efficiency, care
quality and medical expenditure.
"Due to the lack of evidence and the inflexibility of reimbursement policy, the adoption rate of telemedicine in the ER remains low and is growing only slowly," Sun said.
"Policymakers can incentivize adoption of ER
telemedicine by reducing regulatory barriers, such as lifting restrictions
regarding cross-state practitioners' licensure and providing better
reimbursement coverage."
With
the current global COVID-19 pandemic and the expanded use of telemedicine
applications in recent months, Sun said telemedicine has shown its promise to
protect patients and providers without compromising health care access.
"When
more and more hospitals join the resource-sharing network, telemedicine will
have great potential to rebalance the geographically imbalanced health care
resources and reduce health care access disparity," she said.
The
use of telemedicine during the pandemic offers researchers an opportunity to take
a more in-depth look. Sun plans to conduct further research to gather a better
understanding of whether, how and why telemedicine functions in various health
care situations.