Use of Emergency Telemedicine Physicians for Telephone Triage Disposition of Pediatric Patients

Pediatr Emerg Care. 2024 Dec 9. doi: 10.1097/PEC.0000000000003312. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Objectives: Telemedicine is a growing field, with limited data around its utility supporting pediatric emergency care telephone triage. We instituted telemedicine physician support for nurse telephone triage decisions. When the nursing protocols recommended urgent or emergent care, a telemedicine physician reviewed and modified care urgency if appropriate. Our primary study objectives were to evaluate the proportion of patients who were downgraded to less urgent care and assess for potential harm related to the downgrade in care urgency.

Methods: We conducted a retrospective observational cohort study of pediatric telephone calls to the Mayo Clinic Health System nurse triage line that were directed to the emergency department telemedicine physician from January 1, 2019, to December 31, 2019. Electronic medical records of patients whose care urgency was downgraded and presented to medical care within 72 hours of the triage call were reviewed.

Results: There were 8559 nurse line calls regarding pediatric patients, 882 of which were referred to the telemedicine physician. Among these, 396/882 (44.9%, 95% confidence interval 41.6-48.3) were downgraded. Of downgraded cases, 198 (50.0%) patients sought care within 72 hours of the original call, of which 193 (97.5%) patients were discharged home from that medical visit and 5 (2.5%) patients required admission. No patients were determined to have suffered harm due to the downgrade of visit urgency.

Conclusions: Our data suggests that telemedicine physicians can safely downgrade nurse triage care recommendations for pediatric patients. Most downgraded patients sought outpatient care, avoiding unnecessary utilization of the emergency department without evidence of associated harm.