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Experiences With Internet Triaging of 9498 Outpatients Daily at the Largest Public Hospital in Taiwan During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Observational Study
Author(s) -
Ding-Heng Lu,
Chia-An Hsu,
Eunice J. Yuan,
Jun-Jeng Fen,
Chung Yuan Lee,
Jin Lain Ming,
Tzeng Ji Chen,
Wui-Chiang Lee,
Shih Ann Chen
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
jmir medical informatics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2291-9694
DOI - 10.2196/20994
Subject(s) - triage , the internet , observational study , medical emergency , medicine , pandemic , covid-19 , world wide web , disease , computer science , infectious disease (medical specialty) , pathology
Background During pandemics, acquiring outpatients’ travel, occupation, contact, and cluster histories is one of the most important measures in assessing the disease risk among incoming patients. Previous means of acquiring this information in the examination room have been insufficient in preventing disease spread. Objective This study aimed to demonstrate the deployment of an automatic system to triage outpatients over the internet. Methods An automatic system was incorporated in the existing web-based appointment system of the hospital and deployed along with its on-site counterpart. Automatic queries to the virtual private network travel and contact history database with each patient’s national ID number were made for each attempt to acquire the patient’s travel and contact histories. Patients with relevant histories were denied registration or entry. Text messages were sent to patients without a relevant history for an expedited route of entry if applicable. Results A total of 127,857 visits were recorded. Among all visits, 91,195 were registered on the internet. In total, 71,816 of them generated text messages for an expedited route of entry. Furthermore, 65 patients had relevant histories, as revealed by the virtual private network database, and were denied registration or entry. Conclusions An automatic triage system to acquire outpatients’ relevant travel and contact histories was deployed rapidly in one of the largest academic medical centers in Taiwan. The updated system successfully denied patients with relevant travel or contact histories entry to the hospital, thus preventing long lines outside the hospital. Further efforts could be made to integrate the system with the electronic medical record system.

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