Today’s Telemedicine: It’s Anything but Convenient, and It Will Save Your Life!

David Yitzchok Manela Cardiologist Aventura, Florida

Dr. David Manela is the medical director of Manela Cardiology PLLC. This is a premier cardiovascular center that offers a comprehensive spectrum of services from prevention to treatment as well as providing help from nutritionists and behavioral therapy. All of this is included in a fixed annual very affordable membership... more

Most of you have seen the ads about the convenience of seeing your doctor from your home or office. No need to spend half the day getting seen when telemedicine makes it all too easy to be seen from the comfort of your mobile device. The digital format is modern, the video quality is high definition and best of all there’s no copay nor wait time. Despite the absent physical exam, the questions remain focused, the antibiotic is prescribed, and the patient is happy. It seems telemedicine is all about convenience!  And if this ensures an evaluation albeit limited in scope, it is accepted and even promoted considering patient access and ease of care.  

The truth is, today's office evaluation is also limited in scope; the metrics taken are static figures, they give no sense as to what happens in a 24-hour cycle. Almost always, the patient’s reported symptoms are not present at the time of the visit. And unless the patient was already instructed to keep a detailed diary, many of the important historical details are often misrepresented. This skews the story and leads the physician down the wrong path. So much for the traditional office visit!

The opportunity for better fact-finding happens only at home. Here, within a well-strategized plan, a patient can keep meticulous records of important biometrics such as heart rates and blood pressures across an extended time period and survey all symptoms at the time they are unfolding. In as much as a diabetic patient keeps a blood sugar diary, every patient can maintain a diary of important and relevant “tracker information.” This would then pass on to the physician via a patient portal and/or mobile device and expedite the means by which the physician can review and make a well-informed management decision. Telemedicine is now defined as the means by which a “patient-detective” delivers invaluable clues to mission control via their handy dandy mobile device. 

Its convenience may still be echoed in the means of info delivery, but the task of collecting is anything but convenient and requires persistence, commitment, and an understanding that better data is better for physician decision-making out. If telemedicine is seen in this light, its inconvenience may be labor; but a labor of love if it can save your life

For more health information visit www.manelacardiology.com.