SAN FRANCISCO – Telementoring empowers primary care pediatric providers (PCPs) to take on a greater role in managing their patients’ chronic diseases, new data suggest. Leaders in this emerging field gave a snapshot of early experience with the model at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Pediatrics.
“About a quarter of children live with chronic health conditions, and there is an increasing need for specialty care. But many children don’t have access to the quality specialty care that they really need, particularly in rural and medically underserved areas,” explained Dr. Sucheta M. Joshi, a pediatric neurologist and epileptologist at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. “The goal of telementoring is to build the capacity of primary care doctors.”
Pioneers in the field recognized that a sizable share of the population referred to specialists are lower-complexity, lower-acuity patients who could be managed in the primary care setting with adequate guidance.“We need to empower primary care providers to work ‘at the top of their license’ because we don’t have enough specialists,” agreed Dr. David