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The clear and present future: Telehealth and telemedicine in obstetrics and gynecology

OBG Management. 2017 December;29(12):37-43
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Telecommunications technology spans distances and crosses borders to bring health care services to rural and underserved communities and clinics within the United States. ACOG telehealth task force leaders explore how the technology might be applied in routine as well as specialized ObGyn care.

Learning from other specialties and agencies

Dr. Brown: The physician shortage negatively affects access to health care in rural areas. Many city and suburban physicians, including ObGyns, want to stay where they are. Education is needed to show them that a rural practice can be successful. They would have a good patient base and be able to use telehealth to improve care and maintain contact with tertiary care centers.

Several task force members have described their experience within their health systems, and we hope to borrow from that. A health system in South Dakota received a Health Resources and Services Administration grant to use telehealth and teleconsultation in the Indian Health Service (IHS). To women who access their health care through the IHS, being able to remain in the community is culturally important. Telehealth and teleconsultation bring care to these women where they live.

To develop the best telehealth and teleconsultation model, we are borrowing from these health systems and from the experience of our colleagues in dermatology, behavioral health, psychiatry, and other disciplines. These physicians already have overcome many hurdles and discovered the importance of patient satisfaction in providing remote health care.

Patients will benefit in various ways, and here is another example: A clinic refers a patient to an ObGyn to discuss whether it is possible to have a vaginal birth after a cesarean delivery. The drive to the ObGyn’s office takes an hour, but the patient just as easily could have had all her questions answered during a teleconsultation.

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Telehealth recommendations for ObGyns

Dr. Brown: Our task force will develop recommended best practices for telehealth. We will outline how a practice can engage with telehealth and will address licensing requirements, as a practice must be licensed in each state where it uses telehealth. Our goal is to help our specialty get started in telehealth and telemedicine.

In practices with telehealth, it will be incumbent on ObGyns to identify any barriers to care. For example, we are concerned about early discontinuation of breastfeeding, particularly among African American communities. Fortunately, we have learned that video chat follow-ups can help improve breastfeeding continuation rates.

It also will be incumbent on ObGyns to think differently about how best to follow up. For a patient who calls to say she thinks she has mastitis, much of the consultation can be handled by telephone or video conference with the physician and a nurse practi‑tioner, and then medication can be prescribed without the need for in-person follow-up. We must then determine how to ensure these follow-up methods are compensated.

Obstetric and gynecologic care best suited to telehealth
Direct-to-patient virtual visits
  • Virtual home visits
  • Low-risk pregnancy
  • Postpartum visits
  • Lactation support
  • Routine gynecologic care
  • Postoperative follow-up

Remote patient monitoring

  • Chronic disease management
  • Antenatal testing
  • Fetal heart rate monitoring
  • Transfer of care

Final thoughts

Dr. Nielsen: It is time for all US health care players to more seriously and aggressively consider how telehealth can improve health care access, quality, and safety. Even more important, patients and physicians in small communities need to feel that they can access specialists and care that is as good as those available in larger communities without having to pull up stakes and move.

Telehealth can help small communities become sustainable over the long term. As the majority of the people in this country are born in and receive health care in community hospitals, not large tertiary care centers, the state of US health care should be measured by the ability to provide as much care as is technically possible in the small communities where patients live and work and raise their kids.

Dr. Brown: More than 50% of all babies are born in hospitals where fewer than 1,000 deliveries are performed, and almost 40% are born in hospitals where fewer than 500 are performed. To provide high-level care and have patients feel comfortable, to improve morbidity and mortality, we need telehealth and telemedicine.

If I can help a physician in East Africa place a Bakri balloon for postpartum hemorrhaging, surely I can help a physician in rural areas of Wyoming, South Dakota, or North Carolina deal with this obstetric emergency. In obstetrics and gynecology, telehealth and telemedicine have great potential in terms of morbidity and mortality, but we are also doing genetic counseling and a great deal of patient follow-up, and so much more can be done.

That is the key, and the reason for the training, the task force, the deliberations, and the best practices model that we will be sharing with our colleagues.

Share your thoughts! Send your Letter to the Editor to rbarbieri@frontlinemedcom.com. Please include your name and the city and state in which you practice.