Mode
Text Size
Log in / Sign up
N/A N=20 Health Services Research

Prehospital Telemedicine Feasibility/Acceptability Pilot

Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Enrolled (actual)
20
Serious AEs
0.0%
Results posted
Feb 2026
Primary outcome: Primary: Agreement in Assessment of Respiratory Distress — 0.83 proportion agreement

Study Design & Population

Study type
Interventional
Phase
N/A
Interventions
Teleconsultation (Other)
Age
Pediatric
Sex
All
Sponsor
Boston Medical Center
Primary completion
Feb 2025

Outcome Measures

OutcomeResultp-value
PRIMARY
Agreement in Assessment of Respiratory Distress
0.83
SECONDARY
Total Usability Score
6; 5.7
SECONDARY
Video Quality
6.6; 6.2; 6.2; 3.9
SECONDARY
Audio Quality
6.3; 6.2; 6.9; 6.1
SECONDARY
Adequacy of Successful Video-call Connections
14; 6
SECONDARY
Percentage of Successful Tablet Mounts
100; 0
SECONDARY
Percentage of Calls With Adequate Video Quality for Assessment
33.3; 66.7
SECONDARY
Time to Arrival at Referring Facility
66.0
SECONDARY
Scene Time
51.5
SECONDARY
Time to Arrival at Destination Facility
58.5
SECONDARY
Total Transport Time
173.5

Summary

Teleconsultation, or the use of video telecommunications technology to deliver expert recommendations for care remotely, has been used to improve the safety and quality of emergency care for children in hospital-based acute care settings by providing real-time access to remote pediatric physician experts. Whether extending teleconsultation as a patient safety intervention to emergency medical systems (EMS) outside hospitals can similarly benefit sick and injured children in the community is unknown. Advances in mobile technology have made teleconsultation more accessible and affordable for EMS systems. However, this intervention has been underutilized by EMS partially due to the lack of prehospital research supporting its efficacy for pediatric applications. In prior simulation studies, the investigators found high intervention acceptance among key stakeholder groups (pediatric emergency physicians and paramedics), and demonstrated that it was feasible to integrate video communication into prehospital clinical workflows involving critical care delivery in high-risk pediatric scenarios. These initial simulation studies were conducted in a controlled prehospital setting in static ambulances using infant simulator manikins to minimize risk to children and providers. Demonstrating feasibility and acceptability with real children in moving ambulances is the next step to build the necessary evidence base to support future planned prehospital efficacy trials with children. The investigators hypothesize that remote respiratory assessment of children by medical control physicians (expert physicians) using a mobile teleconsultation platform is acceptable to users (physicians and transport providers), and technically feasible in real transports.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Children in New England transported by the Boston Children Hospital for respiratory illness from any cause
  • Clinically stable for transportation [e.g., need supplemental oxygen, medications, or are stable on mechanical ventilation]

Exclusion Criteria

  • Children with non-respiratory complaints
  • Children whose illness is anticipated by providers to be acutely life-threatening during transportation [e.g., requiring emergency resuscitation procedures in the ambulance]
  • Non-English speaking parents/guardians
View full record on ClinicalTrials.gov →

Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05967624). Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication.

Back to search