Telemedicine for triage: A systematic review of virtual consultation in hand trauma.

Telemedicine for triage: A systematic review of virtual consultation in hand trauma.

Publication date: Dec 12, 2025

IntroductionTelemedicine involves the use of electronic communication systems to exchange medical information between health professionals or with patients. With the increasing demand for telemedicine delivery, catalyzed by the COVID-19 pandemic, it is important to investigate the use of telemedicine within the field of hand surgery. The aim of this study is to present the current state of telemedicine use in hand trauma, with a particular focus on accuracy of diagnosis, cost effectiveness, and access to care. MethodsAn online systematic review of MEDLINE, EMBASE, Pubmed and The Cochrane Library from inception to 16 May 2025 was completed. Data extracted included telemedicine medium used, accuracy of diagnosis, cost, impact on patient transfer volume, and timeline for assessment. Study quality was assessed using the MINORS scale. ResultsOf the 15 included studies, eight assessed diagnostic accuracy, four evaluated cost savings, four examined patient transfers, five reported on efficiency, and three investigated access to care. All studies assessing accuracy found telemedicine to be an accurate method of triaging and diagnosing patients. All studies assessing cost-effectiveness found telemedicine to be an effective cost-savings instrument. Telemedicine was also demonstrated to improve healthcare efficiency by decreasing the number of unnecessary patient transfers, reducing extra visits and unnecessary consultations and improve access to specialist care for patients in rural communities. ConclusionsThe current literature suggests that the application of telemedicine in initial hand trauma consultation was found appears satisfactory diagnostic accuracy, cost savings, reduced patient transfers, increased efficiency, and improved access to care when compared to traditional face-to-face triaging and diagnosis of hand traumas although evidence is largely observational.

Concepts Keywords
Extra hand surgery
Library remote consultation
Professionals Telemedicine
Rural trauma
Surgery virtual care

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH trauma
disease MESH COVID-19 pandemic
disease MESH included
disease MESH face

Original Article

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