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©The Author(s) 2022.
World J Methodol. Jul 20, 2022; 12(4): 285-292
Published online Jul 20, 2022. doi: 10.5662/wjm.v12.i4.285
Published online Jul 20, 2022. doi: 10.5662/wjm.v12.i4.285
Ref. | Country | Study type | Objective of the study | Sample size | Key outcomes |
Rastogi et al[13] | India, United Kingdom | Observational cohort | Virtual monitoring of DF complications during COVID-19 | 1199 | Virtual healthcare has similar ulcer/limb outcomes as face-to-face care |
Shankhdhar et al[16] | India | Case report | DF amputation prevention via telemedicine | 1 | Complete healing was achieved in 4 wk |
Rasmussen et al[19] | Randomized controlled trial | Comparison between outpatient vs telemedical monitoring in DFU | 401 | Similar healing, amputation rates between both groups, higher mortality in telemedicine | |
Kilic et al[22] | Turkey | Randomized prospective | Developing and evaluating a mobile foot care application for persons with DM | 88 | Both groups increased knowledge (test group significantly more so), behavior, and self-efficacy |
Téot et al[14] | France | Randomized Control Trial | Complex Wound Healing Outcomes for Outpatients Receiving Care via Telemedicine, Home Health, or Wound Clinic | 173 | Healing time marginally faster for in-person patients. Mortality comparable |
Iacopi et al[23] | Italy | Survey | A survey on patients' perception of a telemedicine service for DF | 206 | Patients thought telemonitoring to be useful during and after the pandemic. Pts with complications worry more about DF than COVID-19 |
Kavitha et al[17] | India | Case Reports | Application of tele-podiatry in diabetic foot management | 3 | Telemedicine effective in low-risk cases of DFU and for referral of higher-risk. Also effective for follow up |
Ratliff et al[18] | United States | Case Reports | Telehealth for Wound Management During the COVID-19 Pandemic | 2 | Improved healing outcomes with implemented telemedicine |
Meloni et al[15] | Italy | Cohort | Management of DFU during COVID-19: Effectiveness of a new triage pathway | 151 | Effective telemedical care with negated hospital transmission |
Fasterholdt et al[24] | Denmark | Randomized Control Trial | Cost-effectiveness of telemonitoring of diabetic foot ulcer patients | 374 | Telemedicine cost is €2039 less per patient treated vs standard care; not statistically significant. Amputation rates were similar |
Smith-Strøm et al[21] | Norway | Cluster Randomized Control Trial | Effect of Telemedicine Follow-up Care on Diabetes-Related Foot Ulcers | 182 | No significant difference in healing time, deaths, number of consultations, or patient satisfaction between standard care vs telemedicine. TM group had significantly fewer amputations |
van Netten et al[20] | Australia | Cohort | The validity and reliability of remote diabetic foot ulcer assessment using mobile phone images | 50 | Mobile phone images should not be used as a stand-alone diagnostic instrument for remote assessment of diabetic foot ulcers due to low reliability |
- Citation: Kamaratos-Sevdalis N, Kamaratos A, Papadakis M, Tsagkaris C. Telehealth has comparable outcomes to in-person diabetic foot care during the COVID-19 pandemic. World J Methodol 2022; 12(4): 285-292
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/2222-0682/full/v12/i4/285.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.5662/wjm.v12.i4.285