
Feasibility of Post-hospitalization Telemedicine Video Visits for Children With Medical Complexity.
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate feasibility and acceptability of post-hospitalization telemedicine video visits (TMVV) during hospital-to-home transitions for children with medical complexity (CMC); and explore associations with hospital utilization, caregiver self-efficacy (CSE), and family self-management (FSM). METHOD: This non-randomized pilot study assigned CMC (n=28) to weekly TMVV for four weeks post-hospitalization; control CMC (n=20) received usual care without telemedicine. Feasibility was measured by time to connection and proportion of TMVV completed; acceptability was measured by parent-reported surveys. Pre/post-discharge changes in CSE, FSM, and hospital utilization were assessed. RESULTS: 64 TMVV were completed; 82 % of patients completed 1 TMVV; 54 % completed four TMVV. Median time to TMVV connection was 1 minute (IQR=2.5). Parents reported high acceptability of TMVV (mean 6.42; 1 -7 scale). CSE and FSM pre/post-discharge were similar for both groups; utilization declined in both groups post-discharge. DISCUSSION: Post-hospitalization TMVV for CMC were feasible and acceptable during hospital-to-home transitions.
Duke Scholars
Published In
DOI
EISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Telemedicine
- Pilot Projects
- Pediatrics
- Patient Discharge
- Humans
- Hospitalization
- Feasibility Studies
- Child
- Aftercare
- 4205 Nursing
Citation

Published In
DOI
EISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Telemedicine
- Pilot Projects
- Pediatrics
- Patient Discharge
- Humans
- Hospitalization
- Feasibility Studies
- Child
- Aftercare
- 4205 Nursing