Abstract

Telehealth utilizes information technologies and communication networks to deliver healthcare and education with lower costs and improved access, quality, and efficiency of healthcare services. This report describes the application of telehealth for medical screening, clinical decision making, and medical referral in a physical therapy practice. The patient described was a 50-year old man who contacted his physical therapist via telephone for a chief complaint of worsening left sided numbness and tingling that began insidiously 2 days prior. Further questioning revealed that the patient also complained of left ankle weakness, and slight unsteadiness with walking. He had not been feeling well and had been experiencing increasing bouts of unexplained fatigue over the previous two months that were now interfering with his work and recreational activities. The patient was evaluated by his physician the next day. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain revealed a large (4 cm) falcine meningioma in the right parietal region. The patient was immediately referred to a neurosurgeon and underwent a craniotomy and tumor resection ten days later and subsequent gamma knife radiosurgery of the residual tumor bed two months after craniotomy and tumor resection. Follow-up imaging one year later revealed no evidence of recurrence or residual tumor. This patient case underscores the importance of recognizing signs and symptoms of serious disease, and how referral following telehealth via telephone can inform diagnosis.

Highlights

  • Telehealth utilizes information technologies and communication networks to deliver healthcare and education with lower costs and improved access, quality, and efficiency of healthcare services

  • The purpose of this report is to describe the use of telehealth for medical screening, clinical decision making, and medical referral for a patient who contacted his physical therapist via telephone for a chief complaint of left sided paresthesias

  • This patient case report may provide some insight for physical therapists and other providers regarding how patients with occult medical disease may access physical therapist services through telehealth, how these conditions may present during a physical therapy telehealth encounter, and the physical therapist’s role in the diagnostic and referral process

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Summary

Introduction

Telehealth utilizes information technologies and communication networks to deliver healthcare and education with lower costs and improved access, quality, and efficiency of healthcare services. Follow-up imaging one year later revealed no evidence of recurrence or residual tumor This patient case underscores the importance of recognizing signs and symptoms of serious disease, and how referral following telehealth via telephone can inform diagnosis. To address the problems of decreased access to primary care providers, especially in rural areas, physical therapists have emerged as extended scope practitioners. In this role they provide triage services and help provide other services to patients with musculoskeletal disorders. The widespread adoption of telehealth in physical therapy practice has been stalled by concerns about implementation, policy barriers, and billing for services (Lee & Harada, 2012)

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