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Physicians Preferences of Virtual Versus In-Person Visits in Neuromuscular Clinical Practice
Author(s) -
Komal Hafeez,
Komal Hafeez,
Muhammed Hafeez,
Aziz Shaibani
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
rrnmf neuromuscular journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2692-3092
DOI - 10.17161/rrnmf.v2i4.15456
Subject(s) - telemedicine , workload , pandemic , medicine , medical emergency , covid-19 , family medicine , health care , disease , pathology , operating system , computer science , infectious disease (medical specialty) , economics , economic growth
Background: While the role of telemedicine is well established in certain fields of medicine, its role in disciplines like Neuromuscular medicine is not clear. COVID 19 pandemic compelled the medical community to utilize telemedicine and policies were rapidly changed to continue patient care during the pandemic. However, to guide the future of telemedicine in this field where a physical exam is an integral part of the visit, it is imperative to get a physician's opinion on this matter. We designed this study to assess the opinion of neuromuscular physicians about telemedicine, their preference, and factors influencing their decision. Methods: We used an online form composed of eleven questions to survey 94 neuromuscular specialists across the USA and Canada during September 2020. Results:  90.43% of participating neuromuscular specialists preferred physical visits with new patients versus 44.68% preferred physical visits with follow-up patients. The majority thought that telemedicine reduces revenue (58.51%), quality of service (57.45%), and quality time spent with patients (62.77%). Nevertheless, most surveyed physicians agreed that telemedicine is time-efficient (84.04%), improves patient compliance (70.21%), and will be a long-term solution in clinical practice (67.02%). Finally, 58.51% revealed that telemedicine does not affect workload. Conclusion: Neuromuscular specialists preferred seeing new patients and revealing a new diagnosis to the patient in physical visits, but they also considered telemedicine a long-term method that would continue to increase in the post-pandemic future, emphasizing the need to address their concerns to facilitate telemedicine.   

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