Telehealth Support From Cardiologists to Primary Care Physicians in Heart Failure Treatment: Mixed Methods Feasibility Study of the Brazilian Heart Insufficiency With Telemedicine Trial
Leonardo Graever, Priscila Cordeiro Mafra, Vinicius Klein Figueira, Vanessa Navega Miler, Júlia dos Santos Lima Sobreiro, Gabriel Pesce de Castro da Silva, Aurora Felice Castro Issa, Leonardo Cançado Monteiro Savassi, Mariana Borges Dias, Marcelo Machado Melo

TL;DR
This study tested how well telehealth support from cardiologists to primary care doctors works for treating heart failure in Brazil, finding it feasible with some improvements needed.
Contribution
The study introduces a mixed-methods feasibility assessment of telehealth in heart failure care within a Brazilian public health context.
Findings
Telehealth support was generally accepted but faced barriers like patient concerns and physician workload.
Asynchronous telehealth was found more feasible than synchronous videoconferences.
Compliance with heart failure treatment guidelines improved slightly after telehealth implementation.
Abstract
Heart failure is a prevalent condition ideally managed through collaboration between health care sectors. Telehealth between cardiologists and primary care physicians is a strategy to improve the quality of care for patients with heart failure. Still, the effectiveness of this approach on patient-relevant outcomes needs to be determined. This study aimed to assess the feasibility of telehealth support provided by cardiologists for treating patients with heart failure to primary care physicians from public primary care practices in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. We used mixed methods to assess the feasibility of telehealth support. From 2020 to 2022, we tested 2 telehealth approaches: synchronous videoconferences (phase A) and interaction through an asynchronous web platform (phase B). The primary outcome was feasibility. Exploratory outcomes were telehealth acceptability of patients, primary…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMedication Adherence and Compliance · Cardiac Health and Mental Health · Health Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of Life
