Teleneurology
Contribuinte(s) |
R. Wootton E. Krupinski |
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Data(s) |
01/01/2005
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Resumo |
Teleneurology enables neurology to be practised when the doctor and patient are not present in the same place, and possibly not at the same time. The two main techniques are: (1) videoconferencing, which enables communication between a doctor and a patient who are in different places at the same time (often called real-time or synchronous), and (2) email, where the consultation is carried out without the patient being present, at a time convenient to the doctors involved (asynchronous or store-and-forward teleneurology). Some problems that can be solved by teleneurology include: (1) patients admitted to hospital with acute neurological symptoms rarely see a neurologist; (2) delayed treatment for acute stroke; (3) non-optimum management of epilepsy; (4) unproductive travel time for neurologists; (5) extremely poor access to a neurologist for doctors in the developing world; (6) long waiting times to see a neurologist. Neurology is a specialty that, because of the emphasis on accurate interpretation of a history, does lend itself to telemedicine. It has been a late starter in realizing the benefits of telemedicine and most of the publications on teleneurology have been in the last five years. Its uptake within the neurological community is low but increasing. Telemedicine requires a significant change in how neurologists practise. The evidence to date is that teleneurology can narrow the gap between patients with neurological disease and the doctors who are trained to look after them. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
Royal Society of Medicine Press |
Palavras-Chave | #Health Care Sciences & Services #Neurological Outpatient Referrals #Randomized Controlled Trial #Acute Ischemic-stroke #Telemedicine #Satisfaction #Reliability #Telestroke #Epilepsy #Scale #Email #321013 Neurology and Neuromuscular Diseases #730104 Nervous system and disorders #730305 Diagnostic methods |
Tipo |
Journal Article |