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About:
Application of Telemedicine During the Coronavirus Disease Epidemics: A Rapid Review and Meta-Analysis
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An Entity of Type :
schema:ScholarlyArticle
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wasabi.inria.fr
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Type:
Academic Article
research paper
schema:ScholarlyArticle
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type
Academic Article
research paper
schema:ScholarlyArticle
isDefinedBy
Covid-on-the-Web dataset
has title
Application of Telemedicine During the Coronavirus Disease Epidemics: A Rapid Review and Meta-Analysis
Creator
Liu, Enmei
Luo, Zhengxiu
Liu, Rui
Huang, Liping
Shu, Chang
Zhou, Qi
Chen, Yaolong
Li, Weiguo
Lee, Myeong
Ahn, Hyeong
Fukuoka, Toshio
Gao, Yelei
Lu, Shuya
Luo, Xufei
Ma, Yanfang
Shi, Qianling
Tian, Daiying
Wang, Xingmei
Wang, Zijun
Source
MedRxiv
abstract
Background: As COVID-19 has become a global pandemic, early prevention and control of the epidemic is extremely important. Telemedicine, which includes medical advice given over telephone, Internet, mobile phone applications or other similar ways, may be an efficient way to reduce transmission and pressure on medical institutions. Methods: We searched MEDLINE, Web of science, Embase, Cochrane, CBM, CNKI and Wanfang databases for literature on the use of telemedicine for COVID-19, SARS and MERS. from their inception to March 31st, 2020. We included studies about the content of the consultation (such as symptoms, therapy and prevention, policy, public service), screening of suspected cases, the provision of advice given to those people who may have symptoms or contact history. We conducted meta-analyses on the main outcomes of the studies. Results: A total of 2041 articles were identified after removing duplicates. After reading the full texts, we finally included nine studies. People were most concerned about symptoms (64.2%), epidemic situation and public problems (14.5%), and psychological problems (10.3%) during COVID-19 epidemic. During the SARS epidemic, the proportions of people asking for consultation for symptoms, prevention and therapy, and psychological problems were 35.0%, 22.0%, and 23.0%, respectively. Two studies demonstrated that telemedicine can be used to screen the suspected patients and give advice. One study emphasized the limited possibilities to follow up people calling hotlines and difficulties in identifying all suspect cases. Conclusions: Telemedicine services should focus on the issues that the public is most concerned about, such as then symptoms, prevention and treatment of the disease, and provide reasonable advice to patients with symptoms or people with epidemic history. Keywords:COVID-19; SARS; MERS; telemedicine; rapid review
has issue date
2020-04-17
(
xsd:dateTime
)
bibo:doi
10.1101/2020.04.14.20065664
has license
medrxiv
sha1sum (hex)
5b096f5491f7d2d78f7a7043f5446f90e53d5499
schema:url
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.04.14.20065664
resource representing a document's title
Application of Telemedicine During the Coronavirus Disease Epidemics: A Rapid Review and Meta-Analysis
resource representing a document's body
covid:5b096f5491f7d2d78f7a7043f5446f90e53d5499#body_text
is
schema:about
of
named entity 'medical advice'
named entity 'Rapid'
named entity 'institutions'
named entity 'Epidemics'
named entity 'Telemedicine'
named entity 'prevention and control'
named entity 'medical institutions'
named entity 'Epidemics'
named entity 'Telemedicine'
named entity 'Coronavirus Disease'
named entity 'Title Page'
named entity 'coronavirus disease'
named entity 'preprint'
named entity 'Wanfang'
named entity 'peer-reviewed'
named entity 'medRxiv'
named entity 'University of Geneva'
named entity 'missing data'
named entity 'COVID-19'
named entity '95% CI'
named entity 'COVID 19'
named entity 'CNY'
named entity 'medRxiv'
named entity 'preprint'
named entity 'Clinical Trials Registry'
named entity 'MEDLINE'
named entity 'GRADE'
named entity 'COVID'
named entity 'telemedicine'
named entity 'pneumonia'
named entity 'quality assurance'
named entity 'coronavirus'
named entity 'anxiety'
named entity '95% CI'
named entity 'fever'
named entity 'preprint'
named entity 'Reference Desk'
named entity 'SARS'
named entity 'World Health Organization'
named entity 'meta-analysis'
named entity 'Wuhan seafood market'
named entity 'medRxiv'
named entity 'infectious disease'
named entity 'preprint'
named entity 'preprint'
named entity '99.9%'
named entity 'psychological counseling'
named entity 'COVID-19'
named entity 'SARS'
named entity 'EMBASE'
named entity 'medRxiv'
named entity 'global pandemic'
named entity 'GRADE'
named entity 'anxiety'
named entity 'preprint'
named entity 'SARS'
named entity 'medRxiv'
named entity 'stay at home'
named entity 'COVID'
named entity 'emergency department'
named entity 'preprint'
named entity 'medRxiv'
named entity 'SARS'
named entity 'medRxiv'
named entity 'Middle East Respiratory Syndrome'
named entity 'COVID-19'
named entity 'epidemic'
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