Definition
In its simplest terms, telemedicine is “healing from a distance”. It is the practice of using telecommunications technology—such as video calls, smartphones, and secure messaging—to provide medical care when the patient and the healthcare provider are not in the same physical location.
Modes Of Telemedicine
- Video: Synchronous, highest fidelity, preferred for first consultations and visual assessments.
- Audio: Synchronous, telephone calls, lacks visual cues, suitable for follow-ups.
- Text-Based: Asynchronous (email, messaging platforms), used for sharing reports, images, or minor queries.
Applications In Pediatric Practice
General Pediatrics
- Triage: Deciding whether a child needs an emergency room visit, an in-person clinic visit, or home care.
- Minor Ailments: Management of uncomplicated upper respiratory tract infections, mild acute gastroenteritis, allergic rhinitis, and mild dermatological conditions.
- Follow-Up: Reviewing investigation reports, monitoring treatment response, and tapering medications.
- Nutritional Counseling: Infant and young child feeding advice, management of uncomplicated malnutrition.
Pediatric Subspecialties
- Pediatric Neurology: Seizure semiology review via caregiver videos, medication dose adjustments, EEG report review.
- Developmental And Behavioral Pediatrics: Ideal for long-term follow-up of Autism Spectrum Disorder, ADHD, and specific learning disabilities.
- Pediatric Endocrinology: Reviewing home blood glucose logs for Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus, titrating insulin doses.
- Neonatology: Tele-NICU (hub and spoke model) guiding peripheral centers in neonatal resuscitation and ventilation.
Pediatric-Specific Considerations
- Triad Of Communication: Involves the Registered Medical Practitioner (RMP), the child, and the caregiver/parent.
- Caregiver Role: Heavy reliance on caregivers for providing an accurate history, obtaining vitals (temperature, weight), and facilitating physical examination maneuvers on camera.
- Legal Age: Consent must be obtained from a legally authorized representative (parent/guardian) for minors under 18 years of age. Assent should be sought from older children and adolescents.
- Non-Accidental Trauma: High index of suspicion must be maintained; red flags for child abuse may be difficult to detect via telemedicine.
Telemedicine Practice Guidelines (India)
Types Of Consultation
- First Consult: Patient consulting an RMP for the first time, or for a new complaint, or if more than 6 months have lapsed since the last visit. Video consultation is strongly recommended.
- Follow-Up Consult: Consulting the same RMP for the same health condition within 6 months of an in-person visit.
Consent
- Implied Consent: When the patient/caregiver initiates the telemedicine consultation (e.g., calling the doctor).
- Explicit Consent: Required when the RMP initiates the tele-consultation or if specific procedures demand it. Can be recorded via email, text message, or audio/video recording.
Prescription Categories
- List O: Over-the-counter drugs (e.g., Paracetamol, ORS, Cough Lozenges). Can be prescribed via any mode of consultation.
- List A: First consultation (video mode only) or follow-up consultation. Includes relatively safe drugs (e.g., standard antibiotics, asthma inhalers).
- List B: Add-on drugs to optimize an existing treatment for a chronic condition on a follow-up consultation.
- Prohibited List: Schedule X drugs, Narcotic and Psychotropic substances (e.g., injectable anesthetics, strong opioids) cannot be prescribed via telemedicine.
Advantages
- Increased Accessibility: Overcomes geographical barriers, providing rural areas access to pediatric specialists.
- Reduced Cross-Infection: Decreases exposure to contagious diseases in waiting rooms.
- Cost-Effective: Saves travel time and out-of-pocket expenditure for caregivers.
- Convenience: Improved compliance for chronic disease follow-ups and behavioral therapy sessions.
Limitations And Challenges
- Lack Of Physical Examination: Inability to perform comprehensive anthropometry, auscultation, or palpation.
- Technological Barriers: Poor internet connectivity, lack of digital literacy among caregivers, and inadequate hardware.
- Diagnostic Inaccuracy: Risk of missing critical clinical signs (e.g., subtle retractions, pallor, organomegaly).
- Privacy And Security: Risk of data breaches, non-compliance with data protection regulations, and lack of private spaces during consultations.
- Emergencies: Not suitable for critical care, active convulsions, severe respiratory distress, or shock.