Abstract

The under treatment of pain has been well documented. Contributing to this is the limited availability of pain management specialists in many geographic areas. The use of technology to provide care to underserved areas is gaining momentum. We chose to study whether stable patients and staff in chronic pain clinic were satified with the use of a videoconferencing format in care delivery. Our goals were to determine whether patients and staff could successfully operate the extant videoconferencing equipment, was the equipment dependably functional, was the use of a videoconferencing format an acceptable method of healthcare delivery for both patients and staff, whether patients and staff were satisfied with the process, and whether this was a cost-effective mode of care delivery. Thirty-six patients were enrolled over 29 months. Questionnaires were administered to staff and patients. Routine pain clinic patient assessment tools were administered. Results showed the use of videoconferencing for this group of patients is useable and satisfactory for both patients and staff, that the patients save time and money, and that for a system where videoconferencing equipment is already in use, it is also cost effective. Staff were able to identify new patient problems. Some patients would prefer to be seen in person but find that the savings in time and money override this preference. Hearing impaired patients have difficulty using this medium. Dependable equipment and phone connections are needed. A videoconferencing clinic format is a clinically acceptable and cost effective method for follow-up of stable patients with chronic pain.

Full Text
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