Program Profile
Expanding the Scope of Telemedicine in Gastroenterology
A specialty outreach program relied on telemedicine to reach patients with gastrointestinal and liver diseases in a large service area.
Brandon Briggs is an Exercise Physiologist, Chani Jain is a Biostatistician, and Krisann Oursler is a Physician and the Director of Geriatric Research and Education at the Salem VAMC in Virginia. Miriam Morey is Associate Director of Research in the Geriatric Research, Education, and Clinical Center (GRECC) at Durham VAMC in North Carolina. Erin Blanchard is an Exercise Physiologist and Cathy Lee is a Physician in the GRECC at the Greater Los Angeles VAHS in California. Willy Marcos Valencia is a physician in the GRECC at the Miami VAHS in Florida. Dr. Morey is a Professor at Duke University Medical Center in Durham. Dr. Lee is an Associate Professor at the David Geffen School of Medicine at University of California Los Angeles. Dr. Valencia is an Assistant Professor at University of Miami Miller School of Medicine and Florida International University in Miami, Florida. Dr. Oursler is an Associate Professor at Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine in Roanoke, Virginia.
Correspondence: Krisann Oursler (krisann.oursler@va.gov)
Author disclosures
The authors report no actual or potential conflicts of interest with regard to this article.
Disclaimer
The opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of Federal Practitioner, Frontline Medical Communications Inc., the US Government, or any of its agencies.
Each patient is given an exercise prescription written to address any impairments noted in the different domains of the physical performance assessment, scored using age and sex percentiles. For instance, individuals scoring poorly on lower body strength are given specific lower body strengthening exercises. Participants are given an exercise program that guides them toward achieving recommended physical activity guidelines using their RPE to modulate each exercise. Duration and intensity of each type of planned exercise are formally discussed after initial and follow-up assessments. In addition, exercise training is informally progressed throughout the program. For Tele-Gerofit, instructors must design each class with the group in mind while being prepared for modifications and specific changes for individuals.
Tele-Gerofit adapts the well-established center-based Gerofit program to be executed without an exercise facility while maintaining the content of the evidence-based procedures. Physical performance testing and exercise training were modified, adding elements necessary for CVT assessments and classes to be broadcast from the Salem VAMC to its affiliated CBOCs. Tele-Gerofit exercises are performed in a circuit style that allows a veteran or small structured groups of veterans to move among exercises and requires less space than traditional group exercise does. Safety and monitoring concerns are addressed with a safety procedure that includes emergency plans for each site, prescreening of enrolled participants, and monitoring of exercise intensity in accordance with national guidelines.1 Similar to the center-based Gerofit program, the exercise prescription is tailored to each veteran’s physical limitations based on initial and ongoing assessment of physical performance. Tele-Gerofit physical performance testing fulfills the same need with only a few modifications using validated measures. Tele-Gerofit assessments are administered by CVT without the need for additional staff on site.
Adaptation of center-based Gerofit exercise classes to Tele-Gerofit is a major innovation. Use of a circuit exercise design was supported by findings in older adults that RT alone, when performed quickly with minimal rest between each set and exercise station, increases both aerobic capacity and strength.23,24 Older adult RT trials that compared circuit RT with traditional RT found that strength gains are comparable between circuit and traditional RT.24-26 Working with adults aged > 60 years, Takeshima and colleagues conducted a trial of circuit exercise with added callisthenic exercises performed in place between RT on exercise machines.27 This dual-modality (AEX+RT) circuit approach was well tolerated and effective, increasing aerobic capacity and strength. Unfortunately, the resistance exercise machines used in those circuit exercise studies and in the center-based Gerofit program are not an option for Tele-Gerofit.
The requirement for an exercise facility was removed by designing Tele-Gerofit exercise to include only functional exercises that rely on body weight or small mobile exercise equipment. Although popular among young adults, functional circuit exercise is understudied in older adults. Recently, a 12-week functional circuit exercise intervention in frail elderly adults demonstrated significant improvements in gait speed and the timed chair-stand test.28 A pilot observational study of Gerofit participants at the Canandaigua VAMC offered 27 veterans functional circuit exercise instead of their traditional exercise facility class and found larger increases in the timed chair-stand test and 6-minute walk distance compared with 11 Gerofit participants in the traditional program.29
This Tele-Gerofit exercise training combines functional and circuit exercise strategies into telehealth delivery. However, its effect on physical performance remains to be demonstrated. To address this question, we are conducting a single-arm pilot study of Tele-Gerofit with CVT broadcast to 3 Salem CBOC affiliates (Wytheville, Staunton, and Danville, Virginia). The goal is to determine the effect on physical performance and collect feasibility data, including attendance rate and patient satisfaction with the video broadcast. In addition, we are planning an effectiveness trial to compare the impact of functional circuit exercise delivered in person (center based, not CVT) with the parent Gerofit exercise program on direct measures of endurance and strength, in addition to physical performance.
Related: Setting and Method of Measurement Affect Blood Pressure Readings in Older Veterans
Implementation research is needed to determine how Tele-Gerofit can be disseminated to other VAMCs and community-based centers beyond CBOCs. Although the cost of the equipment used to implement Tele-Gerofit is minimal, the program requires dedicated and experienced exercise instructors, and the sharing of telehealth resources with other clinical programs. The authors expect that a diverse group of stakeholders is needed across service lines of primary care, geriatrics and extended care, physical medicine and rehabilitation, and telehealth. Of note, this multidisciplinary collaboration is a hallmark of the Gerofit program. The recent success of the implementation of center-based Gerofit in VAMCs across the US demonstrates the program’s flexibility and robust results.18
Plans also include refining strategies for physical performance testing and exercise monitoring. For instance, we would like to adapt telehealth technology for heart rate monitors that can be worn by high-risk veterans at the CBOC and viewed in real time by the exercise instructor. Gerofit is currently being developed nationally for home use, which would remove the need to travel to a CBOC.
A specialty outreach program relied on telemedicine to reach patients with gastrointestinal and liver diseases in a large service area.
The present study demonstrated that standardized measurements of blood pressure were lower than the routine method used in most office settings....