Authors

  1. van Ierssel, Jacqueline PhD, PT
  2. O'Neil, Jennifer PhD, PT
  3. King, Judy PhD, PT
  4. Zemek, Roger MD
  5. Sveistrup, Heidi PhD

Abstract

Objective: To examine clinician perspectives regarding the use of telehealth for concussion assessment and management.

 

Setting: A Pan-Canadian survey.

 

Participants: Twenty-five purposively sampled multidisciplinary clinician-researchers with concussion expertise (female, n = 21; physician, n = 11; and other health professional, n = 14).

 

Design: Sequential mixed-method design: (1) electronic survey and (2) semistructured interviews with focus groups via videoconference. Qualitative descriptive design.

 

Main Outcome Measures: Survey: A 59-item questionnaire regarding the suitability of telehealth to perform recommended best practice components of concussion assessment and management. Focus groups: 10 open-ended questions explored survey results in more detail.

 

Results: Clinicians strongly agreed that telehealth could be utilized to obtain a clinical history (96%), assess mental status (88%), and convey a diagnosis (83%) on initial assessment; to take a focused clinical history (80%); to monitor functional status (80%) on follow-up; and to manage symptoms using education on rest (92%), planning and pacing (92%), and sleep recommendations (91%); and to refer to a specialist (80%). Conversely, many clinicians believed telehealth was unsuitable to perform a complete neurologic examination (48%), cervical spine (38%) or vestibular assessment (61%), or to provide vestibular therapy (21%) or vision therapy (13%). Key benefits included convenience, provision of care, and patient-centered approach. General and concussion-specific challenges included technology, quality of care, patient and clinician characteristics, and logistics. Strategies to overcome identified challenges are presented.

 

Conclusions: From the perspective of experienced clinicians, telehealth is suited to manage symptomatic concussion patients presenting without red flags or following an initial in-person assessment, but may have limitations in ruling out serious pathology or providing return-to-sport clearance without an in-person physical examination.