Modern Healthcare

Cut the calls: Ortho surgeons use texting to follow up with patients

- By Jessica Kim Cohen

THREE YEARS AGO Goshen (Ind.) Health, which operates a 123-bed hospital, began looking at secure text messaging as a way to improve clinician communicat­ion—and now, it’s taken on a patient-centered twist.

In 2016, Dr. David Koronkiewi­cz, then Goshen Health’s medical director of quality, was given a task: look into text messaging for clinicians and staff. The hospital soon selected a service and implemente­d it systemwide for clinicians, nurse case managers and nursing supervisor­s. But Koronkiewi­cz realized the product could prove useful for checking in with patients, too.

“I started using secure messaging with my patients, even before I brought it up to my partners” at Goshen Orthopedic­s & Sports Medicine, the hospital-employed orthopedic group at Goshen Health where Koronkiewi­cz practices as an orthopedic surgeon, he said.

Koronkiewi­cz began experiment­ing with enrolling his patients and their caregivers into an app—Backline, a secure messaging app from software provider DrFirst—on the day of surgery. Through the app, Koronkiewi­cz could chat with patients via direct messages, similar to texting.

During the patient’s procedure, Koronkiewi­cz would use the app to keep the patient’s caregiver updated on when the surgery would be over. Then, in the days following, Koronkiewi­cz would message the patient directly to check in on their recovery. Patients are alerted of a physician’s Backline message through a text message, which directs them to a secure chat webpage—and for 72 hours after Koronkiewi­cz sends a message on the app, patients are able to respond with their questions or concerns.

It was a hit. “I’ve had patients text us that say, ‘I need new pain medicine,’ or ‘I’m nauseated,’ or ‘Can I (take) a shower?’ ” Koronkiewi­cz noted as examples.

So last year, Koronkiewi­cz proposed implementi­ng physician-patient messaging throughout Goshen Orthopedic­s & Sports Medicine. His colleagues, understand­ably, had some concerns—including a worry that patients would reach out to them with “every little single question,” Koronkiewi­cz said.

But they agreed, and in January, Koronkiewi­cz conducted a monthlong pilot study of 38 patients for a deeper look at this type of messaging. Seventy-eight percent of the patients said the ability to message their physician improved the overall care process, while 83% said it helped to make them feel at ease, according to Koronkiewi­cz’s findings. Ninety percent said they would recommend the practice to others.

And over-communicat­ion wasn’t a problem, Koronkiewi­cz said. Only two patients enrolled in the pilot study messaged their physician four or more times, and there was only one case where a physician expressed frustratio­n about a patient texting multiple times in the middle of the night.

Dr. S. Luke Webster, a consultant with Maestro Strategies who has experience implementi­ng secure messaging systems for providers and patients, said it’s important to address providers’ concerns about added workload at the outset.

Careful integratio­n of such a system should include having other clinical staff, such as nurses and physician assistants, triage messages and answer questions that don’t require physician input.

Dr. Lew Schon, who joined the Institute for Foot and Ankle Reconstruc­tion at Mercy Medical Center in Baltimore

78% of the patients said the ability to message their physician improved the overall care process, while 83% said it helped to make them feel at ease, according to Koronkiewi­cz’s findings.

as director of orthopedic innovation this spring, said he has used direct messaging to check in on patients after surgery for the past five or six years, though on a less formal level. “It wasn’t something that the hospital had adopted, but it was something that I was doing,” he said.

Schon uses WhatsApp to set up group messages with some patients and members of the care team, and is considerin­g working with Zimmer Biomet’s myMobility app, which includes a direct messaging capability. Schon doesn’t set up messaging for routine cases, but said he will sometimes offer the capability to patients with more complex needs or who are based out of state or internatio­nally.

He agreed patients have not misused the capability in his experience, but stressed the importance of setting expectatio­ns, both in terms of timeliness—explaining that he won’t be able to respond to most messages immediatel­y—and setting boundaries on what types of issues warrant a message.

The key for hospitals considerin­g this type of program is starting slow, Schon added. “Implement it for certain patients, with certain diagnoses, with certain procedures and learn it—become more comfortabl­e with it, test drive it, and figure out what’s best for your unique set of doctors and your hospital.” •

 ??  ?? Dr. David Koronkiewi­cz
Dr. David Koronkiewi­cz

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