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PD42 Diagnosis Of Chronic Diseases During The COVID-19 Pandemic Through Telemedicine
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 December 2022
Abstract
The diagnosis and management of chronic diseases during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic was one of the biggest challenges facing healthcare systems globally, especially in low-income countries. Since basic health care for chronic diseases can overwhelm the capacity of conventional face-to-face healthcare services, there is growing interest in using information and communication technology and telemedicine to improve access to medical services that are often not consistently available in rural communities. In this context, telemedicine tools should be directed toward maintaining basic health services for patients with chronic conditions in rural and underserved hospitals. This study evaluated a telemedicine system in remote public hospitals in Paraguay to demonstrate how telemedicine improved access to tertiary level diagnostic services for patients with chronic conditions.
This descriptive study evaluated the use of telemedicine for diagnosing patients in remote public hospitals to improve provision of basic health services to patients with chronic disease during the COVID-19 pandemic. The type and frequency of diagnostic studies performed were determined.
During the study 677,023 telediagnoses were performed in 67 hospitals. The 435,568 electrocardiograms performed in 61 hospitals indicated normal physiology (60.1%), unspecified arrhythmias (10.5%), and sinus bradycardia (8.4%). The 227,360 teletomography tests performed in 12 hospitals were undertaken on the head (52.4%) because of trauma (motorcycle accidents) and cerebrovascular diseases, chest (15.8 %), and other anatomical regions. The 14,076 electroencephalograms performed in 19 hospitals were undertaken for antecedents of seizure (53.3%), disease progression controls (14.0%), and headache (12.5%). Nineteen prenatal ultrasound scans were conducted.
Although the results are promising for using telemedicine to bridge gaps and improve equity in the provision of basic health services for patients with chronic diseases in remote locations during the COVID-19 pandemic, a widespread use assessment should be undertaken before this tool is adopted.
- Type
- Poster Debate
- Information
- International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care , Volume 38 , Special Issue S1: Abstracts from the HTAi 2022 Meeting in Utrecht, Netherlands , December 2022 , pp. S105 - S106
- Copyright
- © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press