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Ad Hoc Committee on Telepractice in SLP Session 1612 November 20, 2009 100% QUALITY

Quality Issues in Telepractice

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Page 1: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Ad Hoc Committee on Telepractice in SLP

Session 1612November 20, 2009

100%QUALITY

Page 2: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Janet BrownASHA

[email protected]

Page 3: Quality Issues in Telepractice

What is Telepractice?

Telepractice is the application of telecommunications technology at a distance by linking clinician to client, or clinician to clinician for assessment, intervention, and/or consultation.

ASHA 2004 position statementwww.asha.org/telepractice.htm

Page 4: Quality Issues in Telepractice

A Rose By Any Other Name– Profession Specific

TelespeechTeleaudiologyTelenursing, teleradiology, etc.

– More GenericTelerehabilitation (American Telemedicine Assoc.)

– Even More GenericTelehealth, telemedicine

Page 5: Quality Issues in Telepractice

What Telepractice Is Not

– Distance supervision or mentoringClinical Fellows (allowed by CFCC)

Students (up to university)

Assistants (no guidance from ASHA; check with state)

– Distance education

Page 6: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Necessary Clarifications– Does it assume audio and visual

connection?– Are there specific standards?– What service is being provided, e.g.:

Synchronous (real time) connection with qualified provider?Access to online materials?Self-paced programs?Clinician-monitored programs?

Page 7: Quality Issues in Telepractice

ASHA Resources–ASHA Web page

http://www.asha.org/practice/telepractice/2004-2005 policy documentsLeader articlesVideo clip

–2008-2009 Ad Hoc Committee: Professional Issues document

–Advocacy for Medicare pilot for stroke rehab

Page 8: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Other Resources

– American Telemedicine AssociationTelerehab Special Interest Group

– Center for Telehealth and E-health law– Association of Telehealth Service

Providers

Page 9: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Pauline MashimaTripler Army Medical Center

[email protected]

The views expressed in this presentation are those of the author and do not reflect the officialpolicy or position of the Department of Army, Department of Defense, or the U.S. government.

Page 10: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Past“Telepractice will undoubtedly help our members fulfill their

obligation to improve access to clinical services.”

Telepractice and ASHA: Report of the Telepractices Team(2001)

“Only 11% are now using telepractice in delivering services to their patients…it is striking that 43% of the survey respondents expressed interest in using telepractice in the future.”

Survey Report on Telepractice Use Among Audiologistsand Speech-Language Pathologists

(2002)

Page 11: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Past– Barriers to Telepractice:

CostLack of professional standardsLack of data on efficacy and cost-effectivenessReimbursement policiesConcern about malpractice liabilityConcern about patient confidentialityLicensure laws that affect interstate practiceOther factors

Survey Report on Telepractice Use Among Audiologistsand Speech-Language Pathologists

(2002)

Page 12: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Present– Lessons learned to facilitate success:

Organizational readinessTechnological conditionsUser trainingClinical protocolsOutcomesClient and clinician satisfaction

– Quality issues in telepractice:Developing proposals for telepracticeOverview of current practice settings and modelsTechnology considerations and their impact on service deliveryLegal and ethical issues

Page 13: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Potential Initiative– Clinical intervention through telehealth will play an important

role in care for Wounded WarriorsIncreasing need for TBI assessment, treatment, and surveillanceShortage of TBI specialists to meet this need

– Telehealth delivery can improve TBI services and extendclinical activities across the continuum of care and recovery

Heterogeneous nature of TBI requires cooperation of many disciplinesServices need to be coordinated among military, VA, and community programs

Girard (2007). Military and VA telemedicine systems for patients with TBI.Journal of Rehabilitation Research & Development, 44(7): 1017-1026.

Page 14: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Future– Research is needed to:

Develop evidence-based guidelines for telepracticeProvide clinical outcomes data to substantiate reimbursement for services delivered remotelyPromote widespread acceptance of telepractice through positive scientific evidence to support its use

– Areas in which research is needed:TechnicalClinicalHuman factors and ergonomicsEconomic analyses

American Telemedicine Association(2006)

Page 15: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Developing Proposals For Quality Telepractice Programs

Vickie PullinsLinguaCare Associates, Inc.

[email protected]

USED THE EMAIL ADDRESS FROM WHAT’S IN NET FORUM?????

Page 16: Quality Issues in Telepractice

StakeholdersWho are the stakeholders?

State Department of EducationAdministrators and Teachers Chief Operating Officer of Medical FacilityMedical Support StaffIT Personnel of FacilityClinicians on staff

Page 17: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Why Telepractice?

IDEALimited access to servicesPersonnel shortagesRemote geographic areasTime limitationsCost effectiveClinical outcomes

Page 18: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Technology To Be Utilized

Specific equipment to be utilized and modes of deliveryDiscuss the necessary telecommunications and network links needed for the delivery of the programDiscuss the necessary environmental elements of care

Page 19: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Provider Qualifications

ASHA Certification

State Licensure

Liability/Malpractice Insurance

Telepractice Training

Page 20: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Client Selection

Discuss necessary pre-requisites for clients to be eligible for telepractice

Discuss obtaining consent for telepractice

Discuss clinical protocols

Page 21: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Use of Facilitators

Responsibilities of the facilitator

Utilization of current staff when selecting the facilitator

Facilitator training

Page 22: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Evaluation of Effectiveness and OutcomesDocumentation of clinical encounterDocumentation of client’s performanceEvaluation by student/client, physician, parent, teacher, administrator– Access to care– Timeliness of care– Continuity of care– Coordination and comprehensiveness of

care– Acceptability of care

Page 23: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Privacy/Security

Software and hardware applications with encryption

Virtual Private Network (VPN) software, including downloading and configuring VPN software for a modem backbone and satellite connections

Firewall applications

Page 24: Quality Issues in Telepractice

ReimbursementDiscuss Medicaid issues– Evaluations– Treatment– Care Coordination– Facility fee to the originating site (i.e.

school)

Discuss fees for service – Fees for SLP providing the services at the

distant site

Page 25: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Telepractice References

Share with the stakeholders the success stories of telepractice.

Include references with names and statements from the references regarding the success and satisfaction of the telepractice service.

Page 26: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Quotes

Parent - “My son really loves going to speech this year. He is disappointed when he cannot work with the speech therapist on the t.v. screen.”Teacher - “Telepractice has been amazing just to watch my students be more alert not only in seeing another person talk to them on t.v. but also enable them to improve their speech skills.”

Page 27: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Administrator’s Quote

“We have been very satisfied with the telepractice services. We will use telepractice again next year. Great job!”

Melissa O’BrienSpecial Education Director

Page 28: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Diana ChristianaClinical Communications

[email protected]

Page 29: Quality Issues in Telepractice

SchoolsPrivate PracticeHome HealthClinicsMedical FacilitiesMilitary FacilitiesUniversitiesDay Care Centers

Page 30: Quality Issues in Telepractice

NeurogenicFluencyAlaryngeal SpeechVoiceDysphagiaChildhood Speech-LanguageHearing ImpairedAAC trainingAccent Training

Page 31: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Assessment

Intervention

Consultation

SHOULD THE WORDS ASSESSMENT, INTEVENTION, CONSULIOANLN .BE AT WITH THE BOX WITHIN A BOX?..

Page 32: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Mentoring

Family Education/Support

Team meetings

SHOULD THE WORDS ASSESSMENT, INTEVENTION, CONSULIOANLN .BE AT WITH THE BOX WITHIN A BOX?..

Page 33: Quality Issues in Telepractice

What is important? What do you need to be able to do to deliver quality service?

Audio and visual requirements

Sharing of materials

Modifications

Facilitator’s role

Page 34: Quality Issues in Telepractice

(281) 275-4242

DELETE THIS SLIDE SINCE INFO IS ON THE FIRST SLIDE???

Page 35: Quality Issues in Telepractice

David Brennan National Rehabilitation Hospital

[email protected]

Page 36: Quality Issues in Telepractice

• 1924 cover of Radio News• Radio still in its infancy• 3 years before first

experimental television transmission

Bonfires Telegraph Telephone Radio TV Digital Transmission Internet ???

Page 37: Quality Issues in Telepractice
Page 38: Quality Issues in Telepractice

“Telemedicine is the use of medical information exchanged from one site to another…”Live:

Participants are in simultaneous contact, typically using video and audio (and/or other signals)Real-time, synchronous

Store and Forward:Images, text, and other information are transmitted now for examination laterAsynchronous

Both methods can be used together

Page 39: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Technology makes telemedicine a realityThree roles for technology

Capture – Transmit – Display Information

CaptureInformation

DisplayInformation

Camera(s)MicrophoneMouse/keyboardSensorsRoboticsEtc.

Transmit

ConnectionsT1/T3Cable/DSLISDNPOTS

Computer ScreenVideoconf Equip Data LoggerWeb ServerEtc.

Page 40: Quality Issues in Telepractice

During a telemedicine interaction information is transmitted across a connection between participants at different sitesBandwidth is the measure of how fast information flows, i.e. the speed of a connectionYou can think of Bandwidth as a “pipe”

The bigger the bandwidth – thebigger the pipe – and the moreinformation that can flowthrough it

Page 41: Quality Issues in Telepractice

High Bandwidth connectionmore information can travel between sites in a given amount of time

Low Bandwidth connectionless information can travel between sites in a given amount of time

High BandwidthHigher Quality Audio/video

Faster, sharper video and smoother audio

Low BandwidthLower Quality Audio/video

Slower, fuzzier video and choppier audio

Page 42: Quality Issues in Telepractice

T1/T3Very high bandwidth, digital carrier technologies used for transmitting high volume voice, data, video

ISDN (Integrated Services Digital Network)high bandwidth, all-digital replacement for POTS

Cable modem servicehigh bandwidth, uses cable television coaxial wiring

DSL (Digital Subscriber Lines)high bandwidth, uses analog phone lines

POTS (Plain Old Telephone Service)uses standard analog telephone service

Page 43: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Firewalls

Hardware

Software

VPN

HIPAA

Page 44: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Technology must facilitate and promoteclient-clinician interaction

In some cases, technology may offer the opportunity to enhance and expand interaction

Face-to-Face Interaction

=Telerehab

Interaction

Page 45: Quality Issues in Telepractice
Page 46: Quality Issues in Telepractice
Page 47: Quality Issues in Telepractice
Page 48: Quality Issues in Telepractice
Page 49: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Telemedicine lies at the intersection of humans and technology

Environment

Organization

Telemedicine TechnologyPersonnel

Page 50: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Personnel are involved in all stages of telemedicine planning, training, implementationTelemedicine “users” are broad and varied

Therapists, nurses, aides, doctors, patients, caregivers, IT, support staff, administrators etc.

Each user’s response to telemedicine will be affected by his or her own level of technical expertise, physical capabilities, expectations, and organizational cultures

Page 51: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Clinical need MUST drive technologyAVOID “Technology Push”

Service to deliver• Assessment, treatment, monitoring

Information to transmit• Images, video, documents, EMRs, sensors,

etc.

Technology to implement• Type/format/size of data• Speed of transmission (bandwidth)

Page 52: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Features (“bells and whistles”) alone don’t make a specific technology the right choice…Essential considerations:

Clinical functionalityUsability (learnability, usage, error tolerance, etc.)Economic feasibility (start up and maintenance costs)

Telemedicine “users”:Clients, family members, caregivers, clinicians, assistants/aides, researchers, support staff, etc…

Page 53: Quality Issues in Telepractice

“Off-the-shelf” technology is powerful, but might not be exactly what is needed

e.g. modifications may be neededDocument cameras, fax machines, etc…

There’s no section in the User Manual for “How to conduct a telehealth session”Most Important…

Technology shouldn’t get in the way!

Page 54: Quality Issues in Telepractice
Page 55: Quality Issues in Telepractice

As technology improves…opportunities to deliver a wider range of services at a distancePotential clinical advantages:

Rehab in the “natural” environment is the goalMonitor transfer of trainingEnhance compliance with protocolsPatient-driven proactive healthcare

Clients will expect (and demand) high quality, technology-enabled healthcare

Page 56: Quality Issues in Telepractice

David Brennan, MBESenior Research EngineerCenter for Applied Biomechanics and

Rehabilitation ResearchNational Rehabilitation HospitalWashington, [email protected]

DELETE THIS SCREEN SINCE CONTACT INFO IS ON SLIDE 8???????????????

Page 57: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Diana Christiana

Page 58: Quality Issues in Telepractice

TeamAdministrationIT Support SLPFacilitator

EquipmentTrainingCaseload Management (individual and groups)

Page 59: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Helper

Escort

Behavior Manager

Liaison

Troubleshooter

Page 60: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Lesson on citrus fruit-School Setting

Page 61: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Student’s view-School Setting

Page 62: Quality Issues in Telepractice

• Allows for Picture in Picture

• Therapist can control camera on the school’s side with the remote control

• Zoom in on a particular student when needed

• ELMO, document camera (pictured on theleft)

Page 63: Quality Issues in Telepractice

The school speech therapy room requires a minimum of a 32” monitor to support groups.A document camera encourages spontaneousmaterial sharing.Far end camera control is a benefit in managing groups and for “close-ups”.Using technology that the school is familiar with is beneficial.Kids love technology!

Page 64: Quality Issues in Telepractice

David Brennan

Page 65: Quality Issues in Telepractice

TeamSLPCoordinator/SchedulerIT (Tech Support)SLPFacilitator

EquipmentVideoconferencing with integrated data sharing“Virtual Desktop”

Training

Page 66: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Diana ChristianaClinical Communications

[email protected]

Page 67: Quality Issues in Telepractice

David Brennan

Page 68: Quality Issues in Telepractice

TeamSLPCoordinator/SchedulerIT (Tech Support)SLPFacilitator

EquipmentVideoconferencing with integrated data sharing“Virtual Desktop”

Training

Page 69: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Mr. F.51 year-old maleLCVA (5 months post-onset)Mild-mod aphasia, mod apraxia of speechAttorneyProficient computer userDischarged from SLPfollowing inpatient stay dueto lack of insurance coverage

Page 70: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Service Delivery ModelsHub-SpokeHome TelehealthResearch

Each space/location must be appropriate for service delivery

SoundLightingPrivacy

Page 71: Quality Issues in Telepractice

AV OnlyAudio-Visual Interaction

Only

AV + DataAudio-Visual with Shared

Data Interaction

Page 72: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Mr. Y.68 year-old maleLCVA (21 months post-onset)Mod-severe apraxia, mod non-fluent aphasia, mod dysarthriaRetired grocerNo prior computerexperience

Page 73: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Mr. F.51 year-old maleLCVA (5 months post-onset)Mild-mod aphasia, mod apraxia of speechAttorneyProficient computer userDischarged from SLPfollowing inpatient stay dueto lack of insurance coverage

Page 74: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Legal and Ethical Issues  in Telepractice

Michael CampbellThe University of North Carolina 

[email protected]

Page 75: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Regulation of Telepractice

State Licensure• State Authority• Current Status of State Licensure Laws and Regulations 

• License in Telemedicine– Full license– Special license/certificate 

Page 76: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Regulation of Telepractice (cont.)

State Licensure (cont.)• Alternative License Possibilities

– Negotiated reciprocity – Mutual recognition – Registration – Limited licensure – National licensure 

Page 77: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Regulation of Telepractice (cont.)

Credentialing• Providers

– The Joint Commission:                                               Telemedicine Credentialing Standards

– Specialty Credentialing Standards• Telemedicine Sites

Page 78: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Telepractice Malpractice Liability

• Jurisdiction• The Practice of Telehealth

– The Clinician‐to‐Patient Relationship– The Clinician‐to‐Clinician Consultations

Page 79: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Telepractice Malpractice Liability(cont.)

Standard(s) of Care• Suitability of telepractice • Clinical standards specific to telepractice• Voluntary standards for telepractice practitioners

Page 80: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Telepractice Malpractice Liability(cont.)

• Informed Consent• Apportionment of Liability• Insurance• Telepractice Equipment• Risk Reduction

Page 81: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Privacy of Electronic Health Information

• Concepts of Privacy, Confidentiality and Security

•Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996

•Other Federal Restrictions• International Restrictions• Application of Privacy Restrictions to Telemedicine

Page 82: Quality Issues in Telepractice

E-Health and Antitrust

• The Antitrust Laws

• Issues in Application to E‐Health

Page 83: Quality Issues in Telepractice

Fraud and Abuse

• Kickbacks and Financial Inducements for Referrals

• Exclusion Remedies• Stark Act• Potential E‐Health Fraud and Abuse Issues

Page 84: Quality Issues in Telepractice

References

Fleisher, L.D., & Dechene. J.C.(2009). Telemedicine and E‐Health Law. New York, N.Y: Law Journal Press.

The revised standards, effective January 1, 2004, are contained in the “Medical Staff” chapter of JCAHO’s 2004 Comprehensive Accreditation Manual for Hospitals.