Veterinary Telemedicine: A literature review

As telemedicine becomes more mainstream in the veterinary profession, it is important to understand when and how to utilise it successfully, and its potential downsides. This literature review supports the use of veterinary telemedicine for teleconsultations, and using wearable and mobile health (mH...

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Main Authors: Lori Massin Teller, Heather K Moberly
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: RCVS Knowledge 2020-10-01
Series:Veterinary Evidence
Subjects:
Online Access:https://veterinaryevidence.org/index.php/ve/article/view/349
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spelling doaj-ac097c94d7cb4ead81ae060a1bd141e72021-01-07T15:27:38ZengRCVS KnowledgeVeterinary Evidence2396-97762020-10-015410.18849/ve.v5i4.349349Veterinary Telemedicine: A literature reviewLori Massin TellerHeather K MoberlyAs telemedicine becomes more mainstream in the veterinary profession, it is important to understand when and how to utilise it successfully, and its potential downsides. This literature review supports the use of veterinary telemedicine for teleconsultations, and using wearable and mobile health (mHealth) devices for monitoring animal health. Data supporting the provision of virtual care directly to a client within an established veterinarian-client-patient relationship (VCPR) is more limited, and some of what we know comes from paediatric medicine on the human side. As we have learned from human health care providers, we must be aware there could be a tendency to overprescribe antimicrobials in a virtual visit compared to an in-person visit. Data have also shown telemedicine can be just as effective in diagnosing respiratory disease when compared to traditional visits to a doctor’s office or hospital. Telemedicine is especially effective in areas where access to care is limited, whether because of geography, finances, or lack of resources. Overall, veterinary telemedicine and telehealth can provide positive results.https://veterinaryevidence.org/index.php/ve/article/view/349clinical veterinary medicinetelemedicinetelehealthvirtual careteleconsultingvcprveterinarian-client-patient relationshipmobile healthmhealth
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lori Massin Teller
Heather K Moberly
spellingShingle Lori Massin Teller
Heather K Moberly
Veterinary Telemedicine: A literature review
Veterinary Evidence
clinical veterinary medicine
telemedicine
telehealth
virtual care
teleconsulting
vcpr
veterinarian-client-patient relationship
mobile health
mhealth
author_facet Lori Massin Teller
Heather K Moberly
author_sort Lori Massin Teller
title Veterinary Telemedicine: A literature review
title_short Veterinary Telemedicine: A literature review
title_full Veterinary Telemedicine: A literature review
title_fullStr Veterinary Telemedicine: A literature review
title_full_unstemmed Veterinary Telemedicine: A literature review
title_sort veterinary telemedicine: a literature review
publisher RCVS Knowledge
series Veterinary Evidence
issn 2396-9776
publishDate 2020-10-01
description As telemedicine becomes more mainstream in the veterinary profession, it is important to understand when and how to utilise it successfully, and its potential downsides. This literature review supports the use of veterinary telemedicine for teleconsultations, and using wearable and mobile health (mHealth) devices for monitoring animal health. Data supporting the provision of virtual care directly to a client within an established veterinarian-client-patient relationship (VCPR) is more limited, and some of what we know comes from paediatric medicine on the human side. As we have learned from human health care providers, we must be aware there could be a tendency to overprescribe antimicrobials in a virtual visit compared to an in-person visit. Data have also shown telemedicine can be just as effective in diagnosing respiratory disease when compared to traditional visits to a doctor’s office or hospital. Telemedicine is especially effective in areas where access to care is limited, whether because of geography, finances, or lack of resources. Overall, veterinary telemedicine and telehealth can provide positive results.
topic clinical veterinary medicine
telemedicine
telehealth
virtual care
teleconsulting
vcpr
veterinarian-client-patient relationship
mobile health
mhealth
url https://veterinaryevidence.org/index.php/ve/article/view/349
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AT heatherkmoberly veterinarytelemedicinealiteraturereview
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