Establishment of a cardiac telehealth program to support cardiovascular diagnosis and care in a remote, resource-poor setting in Uganda.

<h4>Introduction</h4>To address workforce shortages and expand access to care, we developed a telemedicine program incorporating existing infrastructure for delivery of cardiovascular care in Gulu, Northern Uganda. Our study had three objectives: 1) assess feasibility and clinical impact...

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Autores principales: Alyssa DeWyer, Amy Scheel, Jenipher Kamarembo, Rose Akech, Allan Asiimwe, Andrea Beaton, Bua Bobson, Lesley Canales, Kristen DeStigter, Dhruv S Kazi, Gene F Kwan, Chris T Longenecker, Peter Lwabi, Meghna Murali, Emma Ndagire, Judith Namuyonga, Rachel Sarnacki, Isaac Ssinabulya, Emmy Okello, Twalib Aliku, Craig Sable
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Publicado: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:2ebc8c327a6b4e3ea341ff6f60b21ea62021-12-02T20:18:32ZEstablishment of a cardiac telehealth program to support cardiovascular diagnosis and care in a remote, resource-poor setting in Uganda.1932-620310.1371/journal.pone.0255918https://doaj.org/article/2ebc8c327a6b4e3ea341ff6f60b21ea62021-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0255918https://doaj.org/toc/1932-6203<h4>Introduction</h4>To address workforce shortages and expand access to care, we developed a telemedicine program incorporating existing infrastructure for delivery of cardiovascular care in Gulu, Northern Uganda. Our study had three objectives: 1) assess feasibility and clinical impact 2) evaluate patient/parent satisfaction and 3) estimate costs.<h4>Methods</h4>All cardiology clinic visits during a two-year study period were included. All patients received an electrocardiogram and echocardiogram performed by a local nurse in Gulu which were stored and transmitted to the Uganda Heart Institute in the capital of Kampala for remote consultation by a cardiologist. Results were relayed to patients/families following cardiologist interpretation. The following telemedicine process was utilized: 1) clinical intake by nurse in Gulu; 2) ECG and echocardiography acquisition in Gulu; 3) echocardiography transmission to the Uganda Heart Institute in Kampala, Uganda; 4) remote telemedicine consultation by cardiologists in Kampala; and 5) communication of results to patients/families in Gulu. Clinical care and technical aspects were tracked. Diagnoses and recommendations were analyzed by age groups (0-5 years, 6-21 years, 22-50 years and > 50 years). A mixed methods approach involving interviews and surveys was used to assess patient satisfaction. Healthcare sector costs of telemedicine-based cardiovascular care were estimated using time-driven activity-based costing.<h4>Results</h4>Normal studies made up 47%, 55%, 76% and 45% of 1,324 patients in the four age groups from youngest to oldest. Valvular heart disease (predominantly rheumatic heart disease) was the most common diagnosis in the older three age groups. Medications were prescribed to 31%, 31%, 24%, and 48% of patients in the four age groups. The median time for consultation was 7 days. A thematic analysis of focus group transcripts displayed an overall acceptance and appreciation for telemedicine, citing cost- and time-saving benefits. The cost of telemedicine was $29.48/visit.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Our data show that transmission and interpretation of echocardiograms from a remote clinic in northern Uganda is feasible, serves a population with a high burden of heart disease, has a significant impact on patient care, is favorably received by patients, and can be delivered at low cost. Further study is needed to better assess the impact relative to existing standards of care and cost effectiveness.Alyssa DeWyerAmy ScheelJenipher KamaremboRose AkechAllan AsiimweAndrea BeatonBua BobsonLesley CanalesKristen DeStigterDhruv S KaziGene F KwanChris T LongeneckerPeter LwabiMeghna MuraliEmma NdagireJudith NamuyongaRachel SarnackiIsaac SsinabulyaEmmy OkelloTwalib AlikuCraig SablePublic Library of Science (PLoS)articleMedicineRScienceQENPLoS ONE, Vol 16, Iss 8, p e0255918 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Medicine
R
Science
Q
spellingShingle Medicine
R
Science
Q
Alyssa DeWyer
Amy Scheel
Jenipher Kamarembo
Rose Akech
Allan Asiimwe
Andrea Beaton
Bua Bobson
Lesley Canales
Kristen DeStigter
Dhruv S Kazi
Gene F Kwan
Chris T Longenecker
Peter Lwabi
Meghna Murali
Emma Ndagire
Judith Namuyonga
Rachel Sarnacki
Isaac Ssinabulya
Emmy Okello
Twalib Aliku
Craig Sable
Establishment of a cardiac telehealth program to support cardiovascular diagnosis and care in a remote, resource-poor setting in Uganda.
description <h4>Introduction</h4>To address workforce shortages and expand access to care, we developed a telemedicine program incorporating existing infrastructure for delivery of cardiovascular care in Gulu, Northern Uganda. Our study had three objectives: 1) assess feasibility and clinical impact 2) evaluate patient/parent satisfaction and 3) estimate costs.<h4>Methods</h4>All cardiology clinic visits during a two-year study period were included. All patients received an electrocardiogram and echocardiogram performed by a local nurse in Gulu which were stored and transmitted to the Uganda Heart Institute in the capital of Kampala for remote consultation by a cardiologist. Results were relayed to patients/families following cardiologist interpretation. The following telemedicine process was utilized: 1) clinical intake by nurse in Gulu; 2) ECG and echocardiography acquisition in Gulu; 3) echocardiography transmission to the Uganda Heart Institute in Kampala, Uganda; 4) remote telemedicine consultation by cardiologists in Kampala; and 5) communication of results to patients/families in Gulu. Clinical care and technical aspects were tracked. Diagnoses and recommendations were analyzed by age groups (0-5 years, 6-21 years, 22-50 years and > 50 years). A mixed methods approach involving interviews and surveys was used to assess patient satisfaction. Healthcare sector costs of telemedicine-based cardiovascular care were estimated using time-driven activity-based costing.<h4>Results</h4>Normal studies made up 47%, 55%, 76% and 45% of 1,324 patients in the four age groups from youngest to oldest. Valvular heart disease (predominantly rheumatic heart disease) was the most common diagnosis in the older three age groups. Medications were prescribed to 31%, 31%, 24%, and 48% of patients in the four age groups. The median time for consultation was 7 days. A thematic analysis of focus group transcripts displayed an overall acceptance and appreciation for telemedicine, citing cost- and time-saving benefits. The cost of telemedicine was $29.48/visit.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Our data show that transmission and interpretation of echocardiograms from a remote clinic in northern Uganda is feasible, serves a population with a high burden of heart disease, has a significant impact on patient care, is favorably received by patients, and can be delivered at low cost. Further study is needed to better assess the impact relative to existing standards of care and cost effectiveness.
format article
author Alyssa DeWyer
Amy Scheel
Jenipher Kamarembo
Rose Akech
Allan Asiimwe
Andrea Beaton
Bua Bobson
Lesley Canales
Kristen DeStigter
Dhruv S Kazi
Gene F Kwan
Chris T Longenecker
Peter Lwabi
Meghna Murali
Emma Ndagire
Judith Namuyonga
Rachel Sarnacki
Isaac Ssinabulya
Emmy Okello
Twalib Aliku
Craig Sable
author_facet Alyssa DeWyer
Amy Scheel
Jenipher Kamarembo
Rose Akech
Allan Asiimwe
Andrea Beaton
Bua Bobson
Lesley Canales
Kristen DeStigter
Dhruv S Kazi
Gene F Kwan
Chris T Longenecker
Peter Lwabi
Meghna Murali
Emma Ndagire
Judith Namuyonga
Rachel Sarnacki
Isaac Ssinabulya
Emmy Okello
Twalib Aliku
Craig Sable
author_sort Alyssa DeWyer
title Establishment of a cardiac telehealth program to support cardiovascular diagnosis and care in a remote, resource-poor setting in Uganda.
title_short Establishment of a cardiac telehealth program to support cardiovascular diagnosis and care in a remote, resource-poor setting in Uganda.
title_full Establishment of a cardiac telehealth program to support cardiovascular diagnosis and care in a remote, resource-poor setting in Uganda.
title_fullStr Establishment of a cardiac telehealth program to support cardiovascular diagnosis and care in a remote, resource-poor setting in Uganda.
title_full_unstemmed Establishment of a cardiac telehealth program to support cardiovascular diagnosis and care in a remote, resource-poor setting in Uganda.
title_sort establishment of a cardiac telehealth program to support cardiovascular diagnosis and care in a remote, resource-poor setting in uganda.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/2ebc8c327a6b4e3ea341ff6f60b21ea6
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