Incorporating Medical Students Into Primary Care Telehealth Visits: Tutorial

BackgroundThe COVID-19 pandemic has brought about sweeping change in health care delivery, which has shifted from in-person consultations to a web-based format. Few medical schools provide web-based medicine or telemedicine training to their learners, though this is likely to...

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Main Authors: Balaji, Aanika, Clever, Sarah Lou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2021-05-01
Series:JMIR Medical Education
Online Access:https://mededu.jmir.org/2021/2/e24300
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spelling doaj-f366f97be8df4a29ab43c9e74bf5ab8f2021-05-28T13:16:01ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Medical Education2369-37622021-05-0172e2430010.2196/24300Incorporating Medical Students Into Primary Care Telehealth Visits: TutorialBalaji, AanikaClever, Sarah Lou BackgroundThe COVID-19 pandemic has brought about sweeping change in health care delivery, which has shifted from in-person consultations to a web-based format. Few medical schools provide web-based medicine or telemedicine training to their learners, though this is likely to be important for future medical practice. ObjectiveThis tutorial communicates a framework for incorporating medical students into primary care telemedicine clinics. MethodsA third-year medical student and internal medicine attending physician from the Johns Hopkins University completed telemedicine clinic visits in April 2020 by using a variety of video platforms and via telephone calls. ResultsNine telemedicine visits were completed over 4 clinic days. Our patients were, on average, aged 68 years. The majority of patients were female (6/9, 67%), and most appointments were completed via a video platform (6/9, 67%). Additionally, our experience is summarized and describe (1) practical tips for how to prepare for a telehealth visit; (2) technology considerations; (3) recommendations for participation during a telehealth visit; (4) debriefing and feedback; (5) challenges to care; and (6) student, care provider, and patient reactions to telemedicine visits. ConclusionsTelemedicine clinics have been successfully used for managing patients with chronic conditions, those who have attended low-risk urgent care visits, and those with mental health concerns. Patients have reported high patient satisfaction scores for telemedicine visits, and the majority of patients are comfortable with having medical students as part of their care team. Moving forward, telemedicine will remain a popular method for receiving health care. This study has highlighted that medical students can successfully be integrated into telemedicine clinics and that they should be exposed to telehealth whenever possible prior to residency.https://mededu.jmir.org/2021/2/e24300
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Balaji, Aanika
Clever, Sarah Lou
spellingShingle Balaji, Aanika
Clever, Sarah Lou
Incorporating Medical Students Into Primary Care Telehealth Visits: Tutorial
JMIR Medical Education
author_facet Balaji, Aanika
Clever, Sarah Lou
author_sort Balaji, Aanika
title Incorporating Medical Students Into Primary Care Telehealth Visits: Tutorial
title_short Incorporating Medical Students Into Primary Care Telehealth Visits: Tutorial
title_full Incorporating Medical Students Into Primary Care Telehealth Visits: Tutorial
title_fullStr Incorporating Medical Students Into Primary Care Telehealth Visits: Tutorial
title_full_unstemmed Incorporating Medical Students Into Primary Care Telehealth Visits: Tutorial
title_sort incorporating medical students into primary care telehealth visits: tutorial
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR Medical Education
issn 2369-3762
publishDate 2021-05-01
description BackgroundThe COVID-19 pandemic has brought about sweeping change in health care delivery, which has shifted from in-person consultations to a web-based format. Few medical schools provide web-based medicine or telemedicine training to their learners, though this is likely to be important for future medical practice. ObjectiveThis tutorial communicates a framework for incorporating medical students into primary care telemedicine clinics. MethodsA third-year medical student and internal medicine attending physician from the Johns Hopkins University completed telemedicine clinic visits in April 2020 by using a variety of video platforms and via telephone calls. ResultsNine telemedicine visits were completed over 4 clinic days. Our patients were, on average, aged 68 years. The majority of patients were female (6/9, 67%), and most appointments were completed via a video platform (6/9, 67%). Additionally, our experience is summarized and describe (1) practical tips for how to prepare for a telehealth visit; (2) technology considerations; (3) recommendations for participation during a telehealth visit; (4) debriefing and feedback; (5) challenges to care; and (6) student, care provider, and patient reactions to telemedicine visits. ConclusionsTelemedicine clinics have been successfully used for managing patients with chronic conditions, those who have attended low-risk urgent care visits, and those with mental health concerns. Patients have reported high patient satisfaction scores for telemedicine visits, and the majority of patients are comfortable with having medical students as part of their care team. Moving forward, telemedicine will remain a popular method for receiving health care. This study has highlighted that medical students can successfully be integrated into telemedicine clinics and that they should be exposed to telehealth whenever possible prior to residency.
url https://mededu.jmir.org/2021/2/e24300
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