Background:
Telemedical physician triage (TPT) is a potential application of telemedicine in the emergency department (ED). We report the technical success, patient satisfaction, and effect on ED throughput metrics (length of stay [LOS] and time to physician evaluation [TPE]) of TPT performed on a mobile platform.
Materials and Methods:
Patients underwent standard nursing triage with or without TPT. Technical success is reported as raw data. Patient satisfaction is reported as raw data±standard deviation on a 5-point (low-to-high) scale. LOS and TPE are reported as mean±SD [95% CI] values. Statistical analyses of LOS and TPE are via two-sample t test.
Results:
One hundred six patients were registered during intervention periods, and TPT was completed in 36 (34%). One hundred ninety-six patients were registered during control periods. The technical success rate was 95%. Average patient satisfaction was 4.7 on a 5-point scale. The primary analysis (106 patients) showed no change in LOS (266±101 [244–288] min versus 258±172 [234–282] min) but a trend toward improved TPE with TPT (35±28 [29–41] min versus 42±31 [38–46] min) (p=0.052). A secondary analysis (36 patients) showed no change in LOS (273±125 [231–316] min versus 258±172 [234–282] min) but improved TPE with TPT (16±15 [11–21] min versus 42±31 [38–46] min) (p<0.0001).
Conclusions:
TPT in the ED on a mobile platform was technically successful, well accepted by patients, and associated with a decrease in TPE but not LOS.