Rapid Transition to Virtual Care during the COVID-19 Epidemic: Experience of a Supportive Care Clinic at a Tertiary Care Cancer Center

COVID-19 pandemic necessitated rapid adoption of telemedicine at our supportive care center (SCC) to ensure continuity of care while maintaining social distancing. To document the process of transition from in-person to virtual care. The charts of 1744 consecutive patients in our SCC located in the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of palliative medicine 2021-09, Vol.24 (10), p.1467-1473
Hauptverfasser: Reddy, Akhila, Arthur, Joseph, Dalal, Shalini, Hui, David, Subbiah, Ishwaria, Wu, Jimin, Anderson, Aimee E, Castro, Debra, Joy, Manju, Nweke, Chinelo, Gogineni, Meghana, Maddi, Rama, Rozman de Moraes, Aline, Shelal, Zeena, Bruera, Eduardo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:COVID-19 pandemic necessitated rapid adoption of telemedicine at our supportive care center (SCC) to ensure continuity of care while maintaining social distancing. To document the process of transition from in-person to virtual care. The charts of 1744 consecutive patients in our SCC located in the United States were retrospectively reviewed during the four weeks before transition (February 14-March 12), four weeks after transition (March 20-April 16), and transition week (March 13-March 19). Patient demographics, vital aspects of a supportive care visit such as assessments (Edmonton Symptom Assessment Scale-Financial and Spiritual [ESAS-FS], Cut-down, Annoyed, Guilty, Eye-opener Screen-Adapted to Include Drugs [CAGE-AID], and Memorial Delirium Assessment Scale [MDAS]), interdisciplinary team involvement, and visit type were recorded. In total 763 patients were seen before transition, 168 during the transition week, and 813 after transitioning to virtual care. Patient characteristics, ESAS-FS, CAGE-AID, and nurse assessment did not significantly differ among the three groups. The after-transition group had a small reduction in counseling intervention compared with before (20.2% vs. 26.2%;  = 0.0068). MDAS completion was higher after transition (99.6% vs. 98%;  = 0.007). In-person visits decreased from 100% before to 12.7% after transition (  
ISSN:1096-6218
1557-7740
DOI:10.1089/jpm.2020.0737