1 / 46

Craig C. Miller, MD, PhD Brian C. Madden, PhD 13 November 2006

Distributed Specialty Care a telemedicine model for delivery of dermatology specialty care in VISN 2. Craig C. Miller, MD, PhD Brian C. Madden, PhD 13 November 2006. Overview. Why? Imbalance between supply of dermatology specialists and demand for treatment of skin diseases in VISN 2

lynsey
Download Presentation

Craig C. Miller, MD, PhD Brian C. Madden, PhD 13 November 2006

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Distributed Specialty Carea telemedicine model for delivery of dermatology specialty care in VISN 2 Craig C. Miller, MD, PhD Brian C. Madden, PhD 13 November 2006

  2. Overview • Why? • Imbalance between supply of dermatology specialists and demand for treatment of skin diseases in VISN 2 • How? • Distributed Specialty Care model • Three-tiered system for delivery of skin care • Primary care provider • Skin Evaluation Clinic • Teledermatology consultant

  3. Shortage of dermatology assets in VISN 2 • Dermatology demand • Over 12,000 patient visits per year • Requirement to provide veterans with “specialty care” • Time constraints: 30-30-20 rule • Dermatology supply • Limited VA staff dermatologists • Disconnect between VA and civilian sectors • Non-priority • Lack of acceptable non-VA care • Limited availability--unacceptable delays • Expensive

  4. VISN2 Dermatology Assets

  5. DSC model: goals • Allows for more efficient utilization of dermatology specialty assets • Maintains high quality of care for skin related disease • Timely • Efficacious

  6. DSC model: key features • Store-forward technology • Skin Evaluation Clinic • Trained non-specialist skin care providers • Intermediaries between primary care and the specialist • Performance measures • Dynamic adaptive system • Continuous enhancement

  7. Telemedicine methodology • Real-time • Video with synchronous (“face-to-face”) patient-consultant encounters • Low resolution, high bandwidth • Inefficient utilization of consultant • Store-forward • Still images with asynchronous patient-consultant encounters • High resolution, low bandwidth • Efficient utilization of consultant • Dependent upon skills of non-specialist • Obtain proper history • Decide on what is “image worthy” • Self-initiate therapeutics and/or diagnostic procedures

  8. DSC: Three-tier delivery system Primary Care Provider Service Agreement Skin Evaluation Clinic Rules of Engagement Teledermatology Consultant

  9. Tier 1: Primary care provider • Identify patient with skin complaint • Utilize Skin Evaluation consult menu to direct patient care • Initiate consultation with Skin Evaluation Clinic (when appropriate)

  10. Skin Evaluation consult menu • Decision Tree for managing patients with skin dz • Determines appropriateness of consultation • Directs patient flow • Service Agreement • Directs initial therapeutic approach for established skin diseases • Prioritizes unknown skin conditions • Suggests alternative approaches for skin disorders that are not referable to SEC • Skin Evaluation consult request form • Asks for reason for consult and whether patient has been seen previously in SEC

  11. Dermatology Decision Tree: an algorithm for skin dz patient flow

  12. Components of Service Agreement • Part A • Known conditions and treatments • Part B • Priorities of unknowns and areas of concern • Part C • Uncovered items (limited resources)

  13. Tier 2: Skin Evaluation Clinic • Evaluate patient • Initiate treatment or perform diagnostic tests • Acquire images according to the “rules of engagement” • Enter teledermatology consult (when appropriate)

  14. Skin evaluation clinic providers • Various backgrounds • Nurse practitioners/Physician assistants • Dermatology residents • Primary care physicians • Training • Training in dermatology clinic • Approach to the dermatology patient • Rudimentary dermatology differential diagnosis • Introduction to dermatology therapeutics • Hands-on training in techniques • Biopsy--shave, punch • Cryotherapy • Electrodessication and curettage • Hands-on training in image acquisition • Access to dermatology educational resources • Feedback

  15. Rules of Engagement • Initial consult that specifically refers to evaluation of a lesion for suspected malignancy • Any patient in which there is a question as to the diagnosis that may affect treatment approach such that the consequence of proceeding along one of alternative lines of therapy could result in a delay in appropriate and prognostically significant care • Any patient that requires a biopsy • Any patient that will be started on systemic medications that require monitoring • Patch test evaluation

  16. The Canon EOS Digital Rebel with the Canon EF 100mm f/2.8 USM Macro Lens and Canon Macro Twin Lite The Camera • 8 MP SLR camera • Macro lens • Macro flash • Back-up available • Technical support

  17. Image acquisition/capture • Image acquisition • Patient ID • Contextual (anatomic context) • Morphological (diagnostic close-up) • Image capture • Client software/access • Card reader

  18. Image quality • Literature • supports the validity of teledermatology in diagnosis of skin lesions • Standards for image resolution/color • DSC standards >> American Academy of Dermatology and the American Telemedicine Association • Future DICOM standard • Techniques to ensure image quality • Standard and simple image acquisition process • Calibration for “true” colors • Training • Feedback • Validation

  19. Tier 3: Teledermatology consultant • Review SEC note • Emphasis on history • View images • VistA Image Display • Document • Link to Teledermatology consultation • Template • Code

  20. DSC: Three-tier delivery system Primary Care Provider Service Agreement Skin Evaluation Clinic Rules of Engagement Teledermatology Consultant

  21. Performance • Training • Basic dermatology therapeutics/procedures • Image acquisition • Resources • Reference materials • Continuing education • Validation • Diagnostic accuracy • JCAHO requirement • Business plan • Cost effective • Healthcare product of sufficient quality • Patient satisfaction • Morbidity/mortality statistics

  22. DSC: Strategy for success • Personnel • Primary care provider (PCP) • Skin evaluation clinic non-specialist provider • Teledermatology consultant • VISN2 Telemedicine consultant • Process • Patient management via CPRS • Image acquisition • Store-forward teledermatology • Coding • Performance • Training • Resources • Validation Performance Personnel Process

  23. VISN2 Teledermatology Initiative

More Related