Telemedicine Consultations: An Alternative Model to Increase Access to Diabetes Specialist Care in Underserved Rural Communities

BackgroundDiabetes care in rural communities often suffers because of physician shortages. When patients need to see an endocrinologist, long-distance travel to urban centers can constitute a barrier to care. ObjectiveTo address this problem, we tested whether dia...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Toledo, Frederico G, Triola, Amy, Ruppert, Kristine, Siminerio, Linda M
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2012-11-01
Series:JMIR Research Protocols
Online Access:http://www.researchprotocols.org/2012/2/e14/
id doaj-73c735265e694b46b56e918902363ca0
record_format Article
spelling doaj-73c735265e694b46b56e918902363ca02021-05-03T02:52:44ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Research Protocols1929-07482012-11-0112e1410.2196/resprot.2235Telemedicine Consultations: An Alternative Model to Increase Access to Diabetes Specialist Care in Underserved Rural CommunitiesToledo, Frederico GTriola, AmyRuppert, KristineSiminerio, Linda M BackgroundDiabetes care in rural communities often suffers because of physician shortages. When patients need to see an endocrinologist, long-distance travel to urban centers can constitute a barrier to care. ObjectiveTo address this problem, we tested whether diabetes telemedicine consultations would be acceptable to rural patients and their primary care providers as an alternative care model. MethodsTwenty-five patients with diabetes in a rural, medically underserved community received glycemic management recommendations via videoconferencing-based teleconsultation with an endocrinologist at an urban center. At the rural site, a nurse trained in diabetes care assisted with the visits. Outcomes measured were patient and primary care provider satisfaction (measured by structured questionnaires) and glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) levels. ResultsPatients and providers uniformly reported high levels of satisfaction and acceptability. Mean HbA1c decreased from 9.6% to 8.5% (P < .001). ConclusionsTeleconsultations are well accepted by users (patients and primary care physicians) and glycemic control seems to improve in patients with diabetes. This new model of care could potentially expand access to specialist care in isolated rural communities.http://www.researchprotocols.org/2012/2/e14/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Toledo, Frederico G
Triola, Amy
Ruppert, Kristine
Siminerio, Linda M
spellingShingle Toledo, Frederico G
Triola, Amy
Ruppert, Kristine
Siminerio, Linda M
Telemedicine Consultations: An Alternative Model to Increase Access to Diabetes Specialist Care in Underserved Rural Communities
JMIR Research Protocols
author_facet Toledo, Frederico G
Triola, Amy
Ruppert, Kristine
Siminerio, Linda M
author_sort Toledo, Frederico G
title Telemedicine Consultations: An Alternative Model to Increase Access to Diabetes Specialist Care in Underserved Rural Communities
title_short Telemedicine Consultations: An Alternative Model to Increase Access to Diabetes Specialist Care in Underserved Rural Communities
title_full Telemedicine Consultations: An Alternative Model to Increase Access to Diabetes Specialist Care in Underserved Rural Communities
title_fullStr Telemedicine Consultations: An Alternative Model to Increase Access to Diabetes Specialist Care in Underserved Rural Communities
title_full_unstemmed Telemedicine Consultations: An Alternative Model to Increase Access to Diabetes Specialist Care in Underserved Rural Communities
title_sort telemedicine consultations: an alternative model to increase access to diabetes specialist care in underserved rural communities
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR Research Protocols
issn 1929-0748
publishDate 2012-11-01
description BackgroundDiabetes care in rural communities often suffers because of physician shortages. When patients need to see an endocrinologist, long-distance travel to urban centers can constitute a barrier to care. ObjectiveTo address this problem, we tested whether diabetes telemedicine consultations would be acceptable to rural patients and their primary care providers as an alternative care model. MethodsTwenty-five patients with diabetes in a rural, medically underserved community received glycemic management recommendations via videoconferencing-based teleconsultation with an endocrinologist at an urban center. At the rural site, a nurse trained in diabetes care assisted with the visits. Outcomes measured were patient and primary care provider satisfaction (measured by structured questionnaires) and glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) levels. ResultsPatients and providers uniformly reported high levels of satisfaction and acceptability. Mean HbA1c decreased from 9.6% to 8.5% (P < .001). ConclusionsTeleconsultations are well accepted by users (patients and primary care physicians) and glycemic control seems to improve in patients with diabetes. This new model of care could potentially expand access to specialist care in isolated rural communities.
url http://www.researchprotocols.org/2012/2/e14/
work_keys_str_mv AT toledofredericog telemedicineconsultationsanalternativemodeltoincreaseaccesstodiabetesspecialistcareinunderservedruralcommunities
AT triolaamy telemedicineconsultationsanalternativemodeltoincreaseaccesstodiabetesspecialistcareinunderservedruralcommunities
AT ruppertkristine telemedicineconsultationsanalternativemodeltoincreaseaccesstodiabetesspecialistcareinunderservedruralcommunities
AT simineriolindam telemedicineconsultationsanalternativemodeltoincreaseaccesstodiabetesspecialistcareinunderservedruralcommunities
_version_ 1721485098975494144