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      Study quality and evidence of benefit in recent assessments of telemedicine.

      1 , ,
      Journal of telemedicine and telecare
      SAGE Publications

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          Abstract

          We carried out a systematic review of recent telemedicine assessments to identify scientifically credible studies that included comparison with a non-telemedicine alternative and that reported administrative changes, patient outcomes or the results of an economic assessment. From 605 publications identified in the literature search, 44 papers met the selection criteria and were included in the review. Four other publications were identified through references cited in one of the retrieved papers and from a separate project to give a total of 48 papers for consideration, which referred to 42 telemedicine programmes and 46 studies. Some kind of economic analysis was included in 25 (52%) of the papers. In considering the studies, we used a quality appraisal approach that took account of both study design and study performance. For those studies that included an economic analysis, a further quality-scoring approach was applied to indicate how well the economic aspects had been addressed. Twenty-four of the studies were judged to be of high or good quality and 11 of fair to good quality but with some limitations. Seven studies were regarded as having limited validity and a further four as being unacceptable for decision makers. New evidence on the efficacy and effectiveness of telemedicine was given by studies on geriatric care, intensive care and some of those on home care. For a number of other applications, reports of clinical or economic benefits essentially confirmed previous findings. Although further useful clinical and economic outcomes data have been obtained for some telemedicine applications, good-quality studies are still scarce.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Telemed Telecare
          Journal of telemedicine and telecare
          SAGE Publications
          1357-633X
          1357-633X
          2004
          : 10
          : 6
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton and Institute of Health Economics, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. dhailey@ozemail.com.au
          Article
          10.1258/1357633042602053
          15603628
          9c25678a-42db-4f10-99a3-1b65dee84fbc
          History

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