Remote consultation with a multiple-screen FilmPlane radiology workstation

Author(s):  
David V. Beard ◽  
Bradley M. Hemminger ◽  
P. Brown ◽  
R. N. Perry ◽  
Bob G. Thompson
BJPsych Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (S1) ◽  
pp. S209-S210
Author(s):  
Rachel Moir ◽  
Roshelle Ramkisson ◽  
Seri Abraham ◽  
Shevonne Matheiken

AimsWhen the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic hit the UK, clinicians within Pennine Care NHS Foundation Trust (a five-borough mental health trust) were faced with the challenge of rapidly switching to a novel way of assessing patients remotely.The idea for a QI project on trainees’ experience with remote consultations was conceived in April 2020. We present our February 2021 results here.We aimed to improve trainee confidence in conducting remote psychiatric assessments by at least 40%, to ensure effective and safe patient care during their 6 months placement.MethodOur discovery process included surveying trainees in April 2020 to explore experiences with remote psychiatric consultations, a literature search of current UK guidance and a local audit. The audit reviewed documentation of consent to remote consultations, with reference to standards as per NHS England remote consultation guidance. Key change ideas included publication of an article, ‘Remote consultations – top tips for clinical practitioners’, video-simulated remote consultations and a session on remote consultations in the trainee induction.In the first ‘plan-do-study-act’ (PDSA) cycle, we presented key findings from the article in a video presentation, which was sent trust-wide. We measured confidence in conducting remote assessments pre- and post-presentation via a feedback survey. Unfortunately, response rates were low and in the second PDSA cycle we targeted a smaller cohort of trainees at the August 2020 induction, although encountered similar difficulties. In the third PDSA cycle, we collected real-time data using an interactive app at the February 2021 trainee induction, and measured pre- and post- confidence following a presentation and a video-simulated remote consultation.Result2/34 respondents had accessed previous remote psychiatric consultation training and12/35 had some telepsychiatry experience. Pre-induction trainee confidence results revealed: extremely uncomfortable (16%), not confident (31%), neutral (47%), confident (6%) and very confident (0%) and post-induction confidence was 0%, 22%, 52%, 26% and 0%, respectively.ConclusionOur project started during the first peak of the pandemic, which may be a reason for initial limited response rates. Our results suggest that the remote psychiatric consultation trainee induction session has shown some improvement in trainee confidence; the ‘confident’ cohort improved from 6% to 26%.Our next steps include collecting similar real-time data, mid-rotation and uploading video-simulated remote consultations to the Trust Intranet. We plan to complete the local audit cycle. We also plan to incorporate patient experience (from an ongoing systematic review) to inform a potential triage process post-pandemic, choosing between face-to-face versus remote consultations.


1995 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 38-44 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicholas M Fisk ◽  
Sarah Bower ◽  
Waldo Sepulveda ◽  
Paul Garner ◽  
Keith Cameron ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

BDJ ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 229 (7) ◽  
pp. 397-398
Author(s):  
M. Dobson
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
pp. 146531252097367
Author(s):  
Emer Byrne ◽  
Simon Watkinson

Objective: To assess satisfaction of patients and clinicians with virtual appointments using Attend Anywhere for their orthodontic consultation and to identify any areas where the technology could be further utilised. Design: Service evaluation involving descriptive cross-sectional questionnaire. Setting: Orthodontic Departments at Royal Blackburn Teaching Hospital and Burnley General Teaching Hospital. Participants: Patients and clinicians involved in video consultations. Methods: Patient- and clinician-specific questionnaires were designed and those involved in virtual clinics were invited to complete these at the end of their consultation. The questionnaires focused on setting up and connecting to the virtual clinic, assessing if the correct types of patients were involved in the clinics and satisfaction with these types of remote consultations. Results: A total of 121 questionnaires (59 patient and 62 clinician) were completed. Of the patients, 93% found the instructions provided to access the consultation easy to follow and 70% of clinicians did not report any connection issues. In 90% of cases, a virtual appointment was seen to be appropriate by the clinician. Respondents showed a high level of satisfaction with 76% of patients saying a remote consultation was more convenient than face-to-face, and 66% reporting they would, if appropriate, like more appointments like this in the future. Conclusion: The overall satisfaction among patients with virtual clinics introduced during the COVID-19 pandemic was generally high. The majority of patients would, where appropriate, prefer more virtual appointments in the future in comparison to face-to-face appointments and it was found to be more convenient for the patient.


2019 ◽  
Vol 110 ◽  
pp. 02047
Author(s):  
Igor Ilin ◽  
Victoriia Iliashenko ◽  
Oksana Iliashenko

One of the most important and promising directions of introducing information and telecommunication technologies into the healthcare system in Russia is the development of a methodology for prolonged monitoring of the patient's condition and remote consultation by the attending physician. This is due to the fact that many diseases that hold leading positions in the structure of morbidity, disability and mortality of patients require active monitoring of the patient, including during the period between planned visits to the clinic. The creation of such systems can not only prevent medical errors, facilitate rapid response, but also helps to solve the most global problem in any chronic disease - poor adherence to treatment. Therefore, the development and implementation of a remote consultation system based on telemedicine technology will reduce the burden on the outpatient unit by reducing the need to visit a doctor and significantly improve the quality of medical care. However, the use of telemedicine technologies requires the existing business process reengineering of medicine center and process of information exchange between participants in this process - regional and federal medical centers. The article suggests the approach to forming information exchange model between federal and regional medical centers using telemedicine technologies for remote monitoring.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document