Abstract

Introduction: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic resulted in disruptions of clinical services, which saw more clinics being conducted as telephone and videos. The study aimed to assess and compare the effectiveness of consultations, that is, telephone, video, and face-to-face (F2F) in a shoulder and elbow clinic.Methods: A total of 84 clinic letters from a shoulder and elbow clinic at a district general hospital were analysed using the Ashford Clinic Letter Scoring System. Of these, 30 were F2F, 30 were telephone, and 24 were video consultations. The letters were analysed and scored based on four parameters, that is, whether a working diagnosis was formulated, relevant investigations were requested or available, a clear management plan was formulated, and whether the consultation was deemed valuable by both the clinician and patient.Results: The mean score (out of a total possible of eight) for F2F was 7.967, 7.667 for video, and 7.333 for telephone consultations. Amongst new referrals, F2F performed the best, followed by video with telephone consultations scoring the lowest. With follow-up referrals, the performance of telephone and video consultations was similar but more inferior compared to F2F. Videos performed nearly as well as F2F when it came to formulating treatment plans for patients. Conclusion: F2F consultations remain the gold standard in a shoulder and elbow clinic; however, careful stratification of patients into video, telephone, and F2F clinics can help in optimal delivery of care. These findings can be applied to other surgical specialties and medicine in general. Virtual clinics are viable and potentially cost-effective options to the traditional F2F.

Highlights

  • The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic resulted in disruptions of clinical services, which saw more clinics being conducted as telephone and videos

  • F2F consultations remain the gold standard in a shoulder and elbow clinic; careful stratification of patients into video, telephone, and F2F clinics can help in optimal delivery of care

  • Our study shows that video consultations are effective as face-to-face consultations according to the Ashford Clinic Letter Scoring system

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Summary

Introduction

The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic resulted in disruptions of clinical services, which saw more clinics being conducted as telephone and videos. The study aimed to assess and compare the effectiveness of consultations, that is, telephone, video, and face-to-face (F2F) in a shoulder and elbow clinic. Even after the end of the first wave of COVID-19 in the UK, telephone and video consultations remained popular in the trauma and orthopaedic department. Their use continued into the second wave of the COVID-19 infection in October-November 2020. Many studies demonstrated the effectiveness and usefulness of telemedicine, the data are sparse on the objective efficacy of telemedicine compared to face-to-face consultations. This study sought to assess how effective virtual consultations are in comparison to traditional face-to-face consultations using an objective metric. The ACLS tool has proven to be reliable, reproducible, and concise, which aids in objectively assessing and auditing the quality and efficacy of consultations [3,4]

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