The Utilization and Benefits of Telehealth Services by Health Care Professionals Managing Breast Cancer Patients during the COVID-19 Pandemic
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Method
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Literature Search Strategies
2.3. Study Eligibility Criteria–Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
3. Results
3.1. Telehealth, COVID-19 and Breast Cancer Screening
3.2. Telehealth, COVID-19 and Breast Cancer Surgery
3.3. Teleoncology, COVID-19 and Breast Cancer
3.4. Telerehabilitation, COVID-19 and Breast Cancer
3.5. Telehealth, COVID-19, Breast Cancer and Mental Health Issues
3.6. Telehealth, COVID-19, Breast Cancer and Physical Exercise
3.7. Implementation and Satisfaction with Telehealth/Telemedicine
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
6. Future Perspective
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Health Care Technological Tool | Study Design–Number of Participants | Objective of the Study | Main Findings | References |
---|---|---|---|---|
Telehealth | Retrospective study of 1351 subjects (842 in-person and 509 telehealth) | To assess the feasibility of conducting integrative oncology consultations via telehealth during the COVID-19 pandemic (2020) | Increased physical activity among cancer patients in the telehealth group compared with those in the in-person group. | Narayanan et al., 2020 [27] |
Telemedicine | Retrospective study of 77 cancer patients at Oncology Center in Brazil | To observe the use of telemedicine appointments at Oncology Centre | Telemedicine appointments for breast cancer follow-up (46.8%), breast cancer screening (26%) and benign breast disease evaluation (13%). | Sonagli et al., 2021 [41] |
Telemedicine | Prospective study of 26 female breast cancer patients | To evaluate the viability and acceptance of occupational therapy services using a telemedicine model | Videoconferencing telemedicine for both perioperative and post-operative sessions were practical, effective and satisfactory and could be used for rehabilitative services. | Lai et al., 2021 [57] |
Telehealth | Prospective study of 235 breast reconstruction surgery patients | To investigate the use of video telehealth to provide consultation to patients after breast reconstruction | Eighty eight (37.4%) of the 235 breast cancer patients received consultation via telehealth visit relating to post-surgical wound healing. | Colakoglu et al., 2021 [60] |
Telehealth | A self-administrated electronic survey of 222 medical oncologist including those treating breast cancer patients | To evaluate the views of oncologists on virtual management of patients and the priority of prescribing anti-cancer treatments | Clinical oncologists have a high level of awareness of virtual management but 50% did not favor virtual prescription of chemotherapy and 45% prefer to manage cases virtually. | Tashkandi et al., 2020 [73] |
Telehealth | Questionnaire-based study of 215 respondents with breast or gynecological cancer; 74 participated in telehealth visit | To assess the perceptions of the utility of telehealth among cancer patients in an outpatient breast/ gynecological centre | Majority (92%) was highly satisfied, 73% reported better access to care, 82% improved health and 92% saved time due to the telehealth services. | Zimmerman et al., 2020 [77] |
Telehealth | Study involved 172 patients with the majority presenting with gastrointestinal malignancies (9.5%) with 14.5% breast cancer patients | To evaluate patients’ perspectives and preferences regarding telemedicine | High patient satisfaction and perception of the technology as safe and effective. | Hasson et al., 2021 [78] |
Telehealth | A study involving 1244 breast cancer patients from 18 centers from Italy and France | To assess the levels of satisfaction of clinicians and patients who agreed to video visits | High satisfaction with telehealth visits during the COVID-19 pandemic, and the technology was feasible regardless of the mode. | Bizot et al., 2020 [79] |
Telemedicine | Survey of 105 patients (38%) | To assess usability of virtual cancer care delivery for patients and providers across | Telemedicine adoption and use in clinical care of cancer patients was perceived to be safe and favorable by physicians and patients. | Miller et al., 2020 [80] |
Healthcare Technological Tool | Study Design–Number of Participants | Objective of the Study | Main Findings | References |
---|---|---|---|---|
Teleoncology | Descriptive cross-sectional study of 421 cancer patients | The use of teleoncology (video call) at a tertiary care comprehensive oncology center | Majority of patients (64.1%) who were contacted using telemedicine had breast cancer. Teleoncology facilitated remote communication and 32.1% of patients required no further intervention. | Yildiz and Oksuzoglu, 2020 [69] |
Teleoncology | Internet-based cross-sectional survey of 381 participants (21% breast cancer patients) | To evaluate the perspective and satisfaction of cancer patients with virtual appointment | Sixty two percent of the respondents reported having had a virtual oncology appointment, 82% had high satisfaction and there was significant use of videoconferencing. | Loree et al., 2021 [76] |
Telerehabilitation | Survey of 15 women with primary complaints of shoulder stiffness, pain, and lymphedema | To evaluate distress and quality of life of breast cancer patients receiving care for breast cancer–related impairments during closure of rehabilitation services due to COVID-19. | Increased distress due to the closure of rehabilitation services due to the COVID-19 pandemic which was associated with decreased quality of life and physical activity. There were improvements following restart of rehabilitation service and offering of telehealth to one-third of the breast cancer survivors. | Helm et al., 2020 [90] |
Telerehabilitation | Study of breast cancer survivors that require rehabilitation as part of their care | To implement telerehabilitation as an initial option for continued care to breast cancer patients | The physical therapy telerehabilitation program provides a range of movement modality, a multicomponent exercise program and aerobic exercises that could be performed in a home environment. | de Rezende et al., 2021 [91] |
Telerehabilitation | Study of breast cancer survivors that attend a Chilean hospital | To implement a model of telerehabilitation | High level of approval and satisfaction by breast cancer patients, clinicians and physiotherapists. | Mella-Abarca et al., 2020 [92] |
Telerehabilitation | Study conducted over approximately 3 months comprising 118 breast cancer patients | To implement a model of telerehabilitation in a public referral hospital | Majority (63%) of the 226 events were conducted via telerehabilitation. These include pre-operative checks, follow-up appointments and prevention of lymphedema. | Mella-Abarca et al., 2020 [92] |
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McGrowder, D.A.; Miller, F.G.; Vaz, K.; Anderson Cross, M.; Anderson-Jackson, L.; Bryan, S.; Latore, L.; Thompson, R.; Lowe, D.; McFarlane, S.R.; et al. The Utilization and Benefits of Telehealth Services by Health Care Professionals Managing Breast Cancer Patients during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Healthcare 2021, 9, 1401. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9101401
McGrowder DA, Miller FG, Vaz K, Anderson Cross M, Anderson-Jackson L, Bryan S, Latore L, Thompson R, Lowe D, McFarlane SR, et al. The Utilization and Benefits of Telehealth Services by Health Care Professionals Managing Breast Cancer Patients during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Healthcare. 2021; 9(10):1401. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9101401
Chicago/Turabian StyleMcGrowder, Donovan A., Fabian G. Miller, Kurt Vaz, Melisa Anderson Cross, Lennox Anderson-Jackson, Sophia Bryan, Lyndon Latore, Rory Thompson, Dwight Lowe, Shelly R. McFarlane, and et al. 2021. "The Utilization and Benefits of Telehealth Services by Health Care Professionals Managing Breast Cancer Patients during the COVID-19 Pandemic" Healthcare 9, no. 10: 1401. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9101401