A co-located audiology service, delivered through a student-assisted telehealth model of care, was trialled for eight months with eligible patients on Cairns and Hinterland HHS Ear Nose and Throat (ENT) and paediatric waitlists. Findings demonstrated a positive impact on access to services, clinical effectiveness and efficiency.
Telehealth Audiology Service in Cairns and Hinterland Hospital and Health Service
Summary
Aim
To pilot and evaluate an innovative student-assisted telehealth model of care to deliver same day, co-located audiology services to patients attending ear nose and throat (ENT) and general paediatric specialist outpatient clinics.
Benefits
The co-located audiology service, delivered through a student-assisted telehealth model of care, was an accessible, effective and efficient audiology service for patients over five years of age on the specialist outpatient ENT and general paediatric waiting list for Cairns and Hinterland Hospital and Health Service (CHHHS).
Background
There is a high demand for ENT services in CHHHS. An audit of the previously lengthy ENT specialist outpatient waiting list indicated 41 per cent of patients required audiology input. These audiology services have historically been outsourced to an off-site private provider often resulting in delays in service provision and multiple appointments for patients, many of who live outside Cairns.
Solutions Implemented
The model that was trialled included an allied health assistant facilitating the tele-audiology clinic within the specialist outpatient clinic and remotely conducting audiology assessments, as directed by an audiologist/supervised audiology student, based at a tele-rehabilitation clinic in Brisbane. The clinic ran three days per week, for the period of the study, with audiological assessments booked in conjunction with ENT specialist outpatient clinics to support coordinated patient care and streamlined service delivery.
Evaluation and Results
The tele-audiology model of care was evaluated using a mixed method approach. Findings from the trial demonstrated that the model of care was able to deliver an accessible, effective and efficient audiology service for patients on specialist outpatient ENT and general paediatric waiting lists.
Key results included
- 95 per cent of patients received a same day, co-located appointment with their ENT specialist outpatient appointment
- 99 per cent of patients were satisfied with the tele-audiology service
- all staff (multidisciplinary team, specialists, allied health assistants) were satisfied with the tele-audiology service
- significant reduction in failure to attend rates for audiology appointments (18 per cent to 6 per cent).
Lessons Learnt
Factors critical to success were:
- high level stakeholder engagement with regular communication and feedback
- staff training to ensure confidence in model and delivery of services
- identifying appropriate software that worked with QH internet firewall and security.