Inpatient Virtual Vision Clinic Improves Access to Vision Rehabilitation Before and During the COVID-19 Pandemic
Author(s) -
Matthew Keilty,
Kevin E. Houston,
Caroline Collins,
Ritika Trehan,
Ya-Ting Chen,
Lotfi B. Merabet,
Amy Watts,
Shrinivas Pundlik,
Gang Luo
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
archives of rehabilitation research and clinical translation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2590-1095
DOI - 10.1016/j.arrct.2020.100100
Subject(s) - telehealth , telemedicine , medicine , usability , acute care , rehabilitation , medical emergency , pandemic , rehabilitation hospital , covid-19 , physical therapy , health care , disease , human–computer interaction , pathology , computer science , infectious disease (medical specialty) , economics , economic growth
Objective To describe and evaluate a secure video call system combined with a suite of iPad vision testing apps to improve access to vision rehabilitation assessment for inpatients. Design Retrospective. Setting Two acute care inpatient rehabilitation hospitals and 1 long-term acute care (LTAC) hospital. Participants Records of inpatients seen by the vision service. Interventions Records from a 1-year telemedicine pilot performed at acute rehabilitation (AR) hospital 1 and then expanded to AR hospital 2 and LTAC hospital during coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) were reviewed. In the virtual visits, an occupational therapist measured the patients’ vision with the iPad applications and forwarded results to the off-site Doctor of Optometry (OD) for review prior to a video visit. The OD provided diagnosis and education, press-on prism application supervision, strategies and modifications, and follow-up recommendations. Providers completed the telehealth usability questionnaire (10-point scale). Main Outcome Measures Vision examinations per month at AR hospital 1 before and with telemedicine. Results With telemedicine at AR hospital 1, mean visits per month significantly increased from 10.7±5 to 14.9±5 ( P =.002). Prism was trialed in 40% of cases of which 83% were successful, similar to previously reported in-person success rates. COVID-19 caused only a marginal decrease in visits per month ( P =.08) at AR1, whereas the site without an established program (AR hospital 2) had a 3-4 week gap in care while the program was initiated. Cases at the LTAC hospital tended to be more complex and difficult to manage virtually. The telehealth usability questionnaire median category scores were 7 for Ease of Use , 8 for Interface Quality , 6 for Reliability , and 9 for Satisfaction and Future Use . Conclusions The virtual vision clinic process improved inpatient access to eye and visual neurorehabilitation assessment before and during the COVID-19 quarantine and was well accepted by providers and patients.
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