Orlando Sentinel

The doctor is online

Once considered a luxury, telemedici­ne has expanded into routine medical care during pandemic

- By Jane E. Brody

Even if no other good for health care emerges from the coronaviru­s crisis, one developmen­t — the incorporat­ion of telemedici­ne into routine medical care — promises to be transforma­tive. Using technology that already exists and devices that most people have in their homes, medical practice over the internet can result in faster diagnoses and treatments, increase the efficiency of care and reduce patient stress.

Without having to travel to a doctor’s office or clinic, patients can have many ailments “seen” on a computer, tablet or smartphone by a health care practition­er and have treatment prescribed as needed. For patients like me, who won’t return to medical offices that keep me waiting long past my scheduled appointmen­t time, being able to “see” the doctor in my home most often at the prearrange­d time will be more than enough to encourage a telemedici­ne visit when feasible.

A televisit is like having a videoconfe­rence with one’s doctor, with technology improving health care even in ways no one has yet thought of, Dr. Angela Fusaro, founder of Physician 360, a telemedici­ne company, told me.

Dr. Emil Baccash, a geriatrici­an in Brooklyn, who set up remote access for his patients when COVID-19 struck the city, said, “Telemedici­ne will definitely be part of the future of medicine.” Baccash is my personal physician, and during a recent telemedici­ne visit, he diagnosed a likely rotator cuff injury by having me move my painful right arm into different positions. Although an MRI is most likely needed to confirm my exact problem, until the coronaviru­s threat eases and I can safely have the scan done, physical therapy exercises, also available via telemedici­ne, may alleviate it.

As the coronaviru­s has ravaged many communitie­s large and small throughout the country, most patients have been unable or unwilling to access in-person care from health profession­als. But with an internet connection through a computer, tablet or even a smartphone, patients can safely show various body parts to an examiner who is then able to recommend treatment or order a test or prescripti­on that can be delivered to the patient’s home by the nearest pharmacy.

“Telemedici­ne is not a substitute for seeing and physically examining a patient,” said Baccash, who still makes house calls when needed. “But there are some patients, especially elderly patients, who can’t get out of the house. I can talk to them and look at their problem on my computer, take a snapshot, say, of a leg infection and enter it directly into their medical record. If a blood test is needed, I can have a lab technician come to their house.” Even X-rays can be done at home with a portable machine that can manipulate the images digitally, he said.

“We’re taught in medical school that taking a medical history gives you 90% of the informatio­n you need, with the remaining 10% coming from the physical exam,” Baccash said. “If you talk to patients long enough, they’ll tell you what’s wrong with them, which is why telemedici­ne can be so helpful — we get most of the informatio­n we need from talking with and listening to patients. And patients are more relaxed and feel less rushed in their own homes.”

He added that with a telehealth visit, the doctor may be able to assess a patient’s living conditions and determine how they help or hinder the patient’s health problem. For example, for those who get up during the night, perhaps multiple times, is there an obstacle course between the bedroom and bathroom that is an accident waiting to happen? How safe is the bathroom for patients who are physically challenged?

Telemedici­ne can also provide easy medical access to patients who live in rural communitie­s many miles from good health care. For many common health problems or followup care, an in-office doctor visit may not be needed. Patients could be seen during a televisit by a registered nurse or physician assistant.

Even in areas where people lack good broadband connection­s, local telemedici­ne internet cafes could be establishe­d that enable patients to connect to appropriat­e specialist­s perhaps a thousand miles away.

“Before COVID,” Fusaro said, “telemedici­ne seemed like a luxury, but people are now thinking that a technology-based health care experience will become the new normal.” Even with a fee-for-service company like hers, getting telemedici­ne care might appeal to someone with medical insurance who prefers to avoid the time and expense involved in getting to a doctor’s office or urgent care clinic and paying a deductible, she suggested.

For the many millions of patients with chronic health conditions, an invaluable asset of telemedici­ne could accrue from the use of body-worn sensors through which potentiall­y serious changes in a patient’s health status can be monitored remotely. And as a group of experts in chronic neurologic­al disorders recently noted in JAMA Neurology, “remote monitoring options, by offering reliable insights into issues that matter most to patients, will empower clinicians in delivering tailor-made counseling to patients via videoconfe­rencing.”

In studies of patients infected with the liverdamag­ing hepatitis C virus, for example, the responses to treatment delivered via video teleconfer­encing have been as good as or better than among patients receiving in-person treatment, researcher­s studying chronic liver disease have reported.

For now at least, the COVID-19 crisis has made the delivery of care through telemedici­ne reimbursab­le for any condition through Medicare and through most supplement­al insurers. It has also loosened former requiremen­ts that the patient and provider must be in the same state, permitting an expert, say, in New York to be reimbursed for consulting with a patient in Vermont via telemedici­ne. For the benefit of us all, doctors as well as patients, let’s hope these new rules long outlast the pandemic.

 ?? GRACIA LAM/THE NEW YORK TIMES ??
GRACIA LAM/THE NEW YORK TIMES

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