Imperial Valley Press

Seminal moment for medicine

Doctors make more virtual house calls due to coronaviru­s, a trend likely to continue

- BY HOLLY ZACHARIA

“If we build this model the right way, it will really revolution­ize medicine.”

Neurologis­t Dr. Obi Moneme, service line chief for virtual health at OhioHealth

The doctor settled in — the ultraviole­t light atop his desk adjusted just right to cast what he hoped was a comforting glow — and hit the key on his laptop to summon his next of 11 patients this day.

In short order, Amanda Shaw’s face popped up on the screen.

“How are you doing today?” neurologis­t Dr. Obi Moneme asked.

“I’m OK,” Shaw answered. And off they went for what was about a 10-minute appointmen­t by video with Shaw in her living room and Moneme in his office at OhioHealth Neurologic­al Physicians.

It was the first time since her stroke a year ago that the 43-year-old’s follow-up appointmen­t was virtual rather than in person.

She approved.

“Of course you want to be safe in these times,” she said of the COVID-19 pandemic. “But honestly, I am so comfortabl­e with my doctor that this works. I know he knows what to ask and is trained to look for troublesom­e things.”

Though telemedici­ne — whether by phone or video — has crept up in use particular­ly for primary care physicians the past couple of years, the pandemic forced the hands of even specialty doctors and clinicians to re-examine the way they practice medicine and adapt.

Necessity to isolate led to a sudden relaxation of federal privacy rules that had prohibited some less-secure forms of patient/doctor communicat­ion such as social-media applicatio­ns like FaceTime or not allowing doctors to communicat­e from home, where others might overhear.

More importantl­y, the rules have been relaxed and Medicaid and private insurers who previously wouldn’t pay for most virtual health care visits now do so.

So the industry has simply exploded. And doctors say there will be no going back. This, they say, is a seminal moment for medicine.

“If we build this model the right way, it will really revolution­ize medicine,” said Moneme, who is service line chief for virtual health.

The numbers from Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, underscore the seismic shift in delivery of health care: In all of 2019, Nationwide had 19 behavioral health visits that were virtual (the only part of the hospital utilizing the technology). Since March, the hospital has now performed more than 45,000 telehealth visits in multiple discipline­s, with more than half of those by video.

Dr. David Stukus had never seen a single patient by video until six weeks ago.

As an allergist and immunologi­st who treats a vulnerable population of kids — both for the fragility of their conditions and because two-thirds of them come from impoverish­ed families and Medicaid qualified — not having them risk coming to a hospital setting even during normal times is a good thing.

In the past two months, his patient no-show rate has dropped to almost zero.

“Think of it: You don’t have to miss work. You don’t have to find transporta­tion or spend money on gas to drive ... to see us,” Stukus said. “I think patients will soon demand this option.”

He said the key to whether this lasts will be whether, after the pandemic ends, government regulation­s remain in place to allow telehealth to continue and insurers continue to reimburse for it.

Doctors agree, however, that virtual visits will never replace all in-person care. And they say there are pitfalls to be mindful of for practition­ers.

Dr. Megan Schabbing, a psychiatri­st and director of psychiatri­c emergency services at OhioHealth, has long been seeing patients virtually when they show up at a hospital in crisis and she is needed but can’t be on the ground.

And it works, Schabbing said. But she cautions that bedside manner remains key even if you aren’t actually bedside.

“I am very old school in many ways. I want to look you in the eye. I want to be in the same room sitting across the table from you,” she said. “My work as a psychiatri­st is so much based on my ability to make a connection, on showing empathy, showing the patient that I really care and I am willing to meet the person where he or she is.”

So how do you do that on a video? “I still say to them ‘ look me in the eyes’ and people respond the same way,” Schabbing said. “They’re just so happy to have someone that speaks their language, someone who is finally hearing them.”

As the pandemic abates and the need for isolation to protect both doctors and patients eases, Dr. Arick Forrest, a surgeon and medical director of ambulatory services at Wexner Medical Center, said traditiona­l medicine will return but not to the same degree it once was.

“There will always be a need for face-to-face evaluation­s and visits. Always,” Forrest said. “But this will be our new normal.”

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