In a given year, 48 million surgical inpatient procedures are performed. Because surgical care often requires specialized knowledge, many patients must travel beyond their local hospital or clinic to receive this needed care. But surgical care takes more than a single day at the hospital with a specialist, leaving many patients in a position to make multiple trips for care.
The surgery process is largely broken down into three phases: preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative phase. Perioperative care occurs in the time frame before and after surgery, as the primary goal of perioperative care is to provide better conditions for patients leading up to surgery and during recovery.
Yet these before and after surgery visits can create unnecessary challenges on patients and providers.
One of these challenges is the lack of specialists in rural areas which causes patients to need to travel for their preoperative and postoperative visits. Specialized surgeons often gravitate to academic medical centers or health systems that offer opportunities for research and teaching, and this preference largely impacts rural patients. In urban areas, which more often house well-known medical centers, there are 263 specialists per 100,000 residents. Rural areas, however, count only 30 specialists per 100,000 residents—leaving patients who reside in remote areas without access to the expertise they need without travel.
This means that many patients are forced to travel not only for their actual surgery but also for their preoperative and postoperative recovery visits. For many patients, this can create financial and mobility hardships.
The good news is that virtual health can dissolve obstacles many patients encounter before and after surgery. Telemedicine can be utilized in perioperative patient care for:
Telehealth in preoperative and postoperative care also supplies benefits to providers. In a study of the use of telemedicine in surgical care it was found that, by implementing telemedicine services, providers were able to improve healthcare access for a much larger patient population, decrease hospital readmissions, and improve the efficiency of care.
At the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) surgeons are utilizing telemedicine services to remotely evaluate pre- and postoperative patients not local to their center. Telemedicine allows patients to meet their UPMC surgeon face-to-face via video, prior to the actual day of the operation, without needing to travel to Pittsburgh. By utilizing telemedicine before surgery, surgeons can evaluate patients and gather their history. After surgery, UPMC surgeons use the same telehealth service to provide postoperative care.
Finally, there’s another reason telemedicine can enable preoperative and postoperative care—data sharing between providers and EHR integration. To allow for effective virtual perioperative care, without the need to repeatedly travel to distant surgical centers, it is vital to ensure that telehealth solutions are more than a simple video call and today’s evidence-based telemedicine can do just that.Learn how a telehealth program can augment your care delivery options and grow your healthcare business.[nectar_btn size=”jumbo” button_style=”see-through-3d” color_override=”#4d98ce” url=”http://globalmed.com/schedule-a-demo/?source=surgerypatients” text=”CONTACT US”]