Telemedicine and virtual healthcare in Ireland

While we wait for the new issue of the Newsletter in the making, we bring you an article from the last Euronet Newsletter, about “Telemedicine and virtual healthcare in Ireland”:

Virtual healthcare and telemedicine have burgeoned in Ireland in recent years, with many private companies offering online services including video General Practitioner  (GP) consultations, prescriptions for medications and home testing kits for sexually transmitted infections (STIs). As an example, there are now at least seven different online companies offering STIs testing to individuals in Ireland without the need to see a doctor or health worker. Some of these companies are based in Ireland, others are based in other countries such as the UK.

Health insurance companies have come on board and many now have contracts with online GP consultation services offering video consultations with one of these companies as part of their health insurance package.

So what are the implications for health and health care in Ireland from the advent of such companies? Certainly there are potential benefits to using online platforms in health and health care.

They have the potential to improve access to patients who live in rural or remote areas.  In the area of STIs testing they may increase testing and treatment of STIs particularly in young people. Telemedicine may increase the number of patients who can be seen and treated during a given period of time, important at a time when many GPs in Ireland are emigrating to other countries.

Virtual platforms have been used to improve communication and delivery of healthcare between services. In Ireland, a pilot programme between family doctors and hospital specialists involving an online forum for discussion and advice on cases has been used to reduce admissions to hospital.

However, this new and developing field raises many questions for health and healthcare. Because these are private companies, without an established relationship with patients, the loss of the central pillars of primary care that include continuity of care, the management of multi-morbidities, the doctor-patient relationship and the delivery of a holistic model of care are concerns. Testing for STIs through this system may also affect notification, contact tracing and sexual health promotion. Other questions arise; for example will rates of antibiotic prescribing increase, given that physical examination will not be possible in a video consultation for a respiratory tract infection?

There are many questions to be answered as to how the advent of such systems of delivering healthcare can affect health and healthcare in Ireland, both good and bad. It’s an opportunity for Public Health in Ireland to engage with the issue as it is likely that telemedicine and virtual healthcare will continue to expand both in Ireland and internationally.

Chantal Migone

EuroNet MRPH Ireland

http://emcrit.org/pulmcrit/demystifying-the-p-value/

Lies, damned lies, and statistics. Hacking the P-value.

In order to bring more out of the effort that are invested in the EuroNet Newsletters, we will also be featuring articles as blog posts on a regular basis, so that people that don’t read the entire newsletter all at once (there might be a few;)) can still read (most of) it across time.

Also, don’t forget that the next issue is in the making and you can be part of it!

Hoping to inspire you, take a read at Damiano Cerasuolo’s article “Lies, damned lies, and statistics. Hacking the P-value“, from the last Euronet Newsletter:

In chapters from ‘my Autobiography’ Mark Twain says: “there are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.” [1] Twain’s statement about the use and the misuse of statistics couldn’t have been more farsighted. On February 2016, 177-year-old American Statistical Association (ASA) released a statement [2] (followed by a scientific publication [3]) issuing guidelines of p value to conduct and interpret quantitative science. P-value is misused. P-value is usually used to test (and possibly dismiss) the “null hypothesis”. If the statistical test of two groups or pair of characteristics results in a P-value below 0.05, the null hypothesis is usually dismissed (depending on the level of significance intended): there is a relationship between the two groups (or the two characteristics) that is not attributable to mere chance. On more practical basis, we want to test the association between two factors, for example age and injectable drug use in two comparable groups issued from a specific population. If our statistical test results in a p-value of less than 0.05, the association between the two factors is usually statistically significant. However, a significant P-value doesn’t provide any information about the strength of the relationship between the two factors, neither about its direction. Criticism of the p-value is not new. On February 25th, 2015, the journal Basic and Applied Social Psychology issued an editorial [4] banning P-values and confidence intervals from all future papers. Undoubtedly these drastic steps could seem counterproductive but they have the merit to start the debate. Without proposing a ban of P-value results, the American Statistical Association observes “good statistical practice is an essential component of good scientific practice”. Meanwhile its executive director, Ron Wasserstein, explains that “wellreasoned statistical arguments contain much more than the value of a single number and whether that number exceeds an arbitrary threshold. The ASA statement is intended to steer research into a ‘post p<0.05 era’”. In other words, P-value should not substitute scientific reasoning but it should come together with numerical and graphical summaries of data, interpretation and understanding of the phenomenon under study and its results in context. Wrong P-value reporting is helping “bad” science being published: without information and with only P-value results, nonsignificant data can easily make its way through publication. Stanford metaresearcher John Ioannidis and colleagues found an increasing number of articles reporting P-values over time[5]. Almost all articles and abstracts with P-values reported statistically significant results while confidence intervals, Bayes factors, or effect sizes were rarely mentioned. The explanation to this phenomenon has already its own name: publication bias (for statistical significance). Daniël Lakens in a 2015 paper published by PeerJ [6] defines publication bias as ‘tendency to publish statistical significant results, both because authors are more likely to submit these results and reviewers and editors to evaluate more positively these manuscripts’. In the way publication bias sacrifices reproducibility (the ability to recompute results) and replicability (the chances other experimenters will achieve a consistent result) to publication itself[7], addressing this issue is urgent. Statistics are a core part of Public Health and although P-value debate could be perceived as “pure statistics”, it is not. Public Health ranges from epidemiology to hygiene, from biostatistics to health promotion. It is not a unitary, monolithic discipline and it requires a multidisciplinary approach to the “P-value gate”, in order to provide the best answers to each subdiscipline. Specialists in public health should join the debate, proposing solutions.

Damiano Cerasuolo

Euronet France

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[ 1 ] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lies,_damned_lies,_and_statistics

[2] http://www.amstat.org/newsroom/pressreleases/P-ValueStatement.pdf

[3] Ronald L. Wasserstein , Nicole A. Lazar. The ASA’s statement on p-values: context, process, and purpose. The American Statistician. http://d x.doi.org/10.1080/00031305.2016.1154108

[4] David Trafimow & Michael Marks (2015) Editorial, Basic and Applied Social Psychology, 37:1, 1-2, DOI: 10.1080/01973533.2015.1012991

[5] Chavalarias D, Wallach J, Li A, Ioannidis JA. Evolution of Reporting P Values in the Biomedical Literature, 1990-2015. JAMA. 2016;315(11):1141-1148. doi:10.1001/jama.2016.1952.

[6] Lakens D. (2015) On the challenges of drawing conclusions from p-values just below 0.05. PeerJ3:e1142 https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.1142

[7] Jeffrey T. Leek and Roger D. Peng Opinion: Reproducible research can still be wrong: Adopting a prevention approach. PNAS 2015 112 (6) 1645-1646; doi:10.1073/pnas.1421412111

blog picture from:http://emcrit.org/pulmcrit/demystifying-the-p-value/