Preliminary Assessment of a Telehealth Approach to Evaluating, Treating, and Discharging Low-Acuity Patients With Suspected COVID-19

J Emerg Med. 2020 Dec;59(6):957-963. doi: 10.1016/j.jemermed.2020.08.007. Epub 2020 Aug 7.

Abstract

Background: Telemedicine is uniquely positioned to address challenges posed to emergency departments (EDs) by the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. By reducing in-person contact, it should decrease provider risk of infection and preserve personal protective equipment (PPE).

Objectives: To describe and assess the early results of a novel telehealth workflow in which remote providers collaborate with in-person nursing to evaluate and discharge well-appearing, low-risk ED patients with suspected COVID-19 infection.

Methods: Retrospective chart review was completed 3 weeks after implementation. Metrics include the number of patients evaluated, number of patients discharged without in-person contact, telehealth wait time and duration, collection of testing, ED length of stay (ED-LOS), 72-h return, number of in-person health care provider contacts, and associated PPE use.

Results: Among 302 patients evaluated by telehealth, 153 patients were evaluated and discharged by a telehealth provider with reductions in ED-LOS, PPE use, and close contact with health care personnel. These patients had a 62.5% shorter ED-LOS compared with other Emergency Severity Index level 4 patients seen over the same time period. Telehealth use for these 153 patients saved 413 sets of PPE. We observed a 3.9% 72-h revisit rate. One patient discharged after telehealth evaluation was hospitalized on a return visit 9 days later.

Conclusion: Telehealth can be safely and efficiently used to evaluate, treat, test, and discharge ED patients suspected to have COVID-19. This workflow reduces infection risks to health care providers, PPE use, and ED-LOS. Additionally, it allows quarantined but otherwise well clinicians to continue working.

Keywords: COVID-19; length of stay; personal protective equipment; safety; telemedicine.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • COVID-19 / diagnosis*
  • COVID-19 / therapy*
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Patient Acuity
  • Patient Discharge / standards*
  • Patient Discharge / trends
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Telemedicine / methods*
  • Telemedicine / trends
  • Triage / methods
  • Triage / trends