Background: Digital health is more relevant now than ever before, and interventions have a clear potential to improve the quality of care while reducing health care costs. Telemedicine has emerged as a transformative approach to health care delivery, particularly accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic. In mission environments, telemedicine increasingly supports the management of acute injuries, chronic conditions, predeployment screening, and follow-up assessments, often using low-bandwidth store-and-forward modalities. Method: By reviewing existing literature and considering several different (heterogeneous) programs for “telemedicine for mission support,” the key performance indicators are explored to evaluate telemedicine in missions, following its implementation. Both acute and chronic care use cases, as well as operational, clinical, and technical determinants of feasibility, were considered. Results: This article presents the clinical, operational, and economic benefits of “telemedicine in missions” and the metrics for a comprehensive cost-effectiveness analysis or cost–benefit analysis, considering its economic and clinical impacts. Conclusions: Telemedicine in missions shows considerable differences from other telemedicine applications depending on the actors and the resulting circumstances. Considering the heterogeneity of the metrics provided, even within the field of “telemedicine in missions,” the analyses have to be conducted in accordance with the encountered conditions. Nevertheless, a set of metrics can be applied to nearly all use cases across the different applications and actors. A mission-adaptable minimum data set is proposed to support standardized evaluation across diverse operational contexts.
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Patrick Scheid
Koblenz University of Applied Sciences
David Padi
University of Missouri–St. Louis
Hynek Schvach
University of Defence
Telemedicine Journal and e-Health
Universität der Bundeswehr München
University of Defence
University of Defence
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Scheid et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d8955f6c1944d70ce065ee — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/15305627261440753
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