Telemedicine

Diagnosing dysphagia in COVID-19 with telemedicine

Spread the love

Clinicians who are diagnosing and treating dysphagia in COVID-19 patients should use telemedicine in order to reduce risk to themselves, say experts.
The COVID-19 pandemic has seen a rise in the use of telemedicine for healthcare services from routine checkups to therapy and rehabilitation. Now, doctors at Johns Hopkins Medicine have said that clinicians should use telemedicine to diagnose and treat this side effect of COVID-19 in order to protect themselves from contracting the infection.

The editorial has been published in Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation.

Risk-prone conditions

As the usual diagnosis and treatment of dysphagia involves bedside evaluation looking at swallowing ability and changes in anatomy, for example, diagnosing and treating this condition is a high-risk activity due to the need for social distancing.

Treating dysphagia remotely is not new, having been researched and practised (to a smaller extent) for nearly 20 years. However, more widespread use had previously been hampered by technological difficulties, high expense of equipment, lack of standardised training, and billing and coverage issues.

Martin Brodsky, associate professor of physical medicine and rehabilitation at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, said: “Although vast improvements in telemedicine for dysphagia have been made in recent years, patients continue to be limited in their ability to receive effective remote care. With the current pandemic, we need that to change because the traditional clinical and instrumental exams used for assessing dysphagia are putting health care workers who treat patients with COVID-19 at risk for contracting and further spreading the disease.”

“We need innovative thinking and technologies to be rapidly translated into clinical practice to enable telemedicine services for dysphagia, now more than ever.”

The doctors said that relying on methods such as medical history reviews and patient reporting of symptoms is not enough.

Brodsky added: “The irony is that patients with COVID-19, especially those who were recently removed from mechanical ventilation in intensive care units, may be among those who most need the clinical and instrumental exams for properly and comprehensively assessing dysphagia.”

AHIT

Recent Posts

South Africa steps up cancer data gathering

By: Elna Schütz [JOHANNESBURG] South Africa has begun collecting data on cancer directly from patients…

2 months ago

Kenya’s healthcare system needs immersive technologies

Kenya's healthcare system faces numerous challenges, including limited access to specialists, uneven distribution of resources…

3 months ago

Adoption of Technology to Address Africa’s Healthcare Challenges

Technological transformation has   been  advocated for a sweeping technological transformation to confront the critical healthcare…

3 months ago

AI a ‘potent remedy’ for Africa’s health challenges

By: Jackie Opara [LAGOS] Artificial Intelligence (AI) could emerge as a potent remedy for long-standing…

3 months ago

HealthTech Hub Africa receives support to fast-track health tech innovation.s across the continent.

The African Development Bank Group has entered into an agreement with the HealthTech Hub Africa…

3 months ago

Tanzania: Dawa Mkononi secures funding to enhance healthcare access

Dawa Mkononi, a B2B pharmaceutical firm based in Tanzania, focused on using innovation to improve…

3 months ago