Telehealth Transforms Serious Illness Conversations in Neuromuscular Emergencies
A new article in Neurology Clinical Practice explores the application of telehealth for conducting serious illness conversations with patients suffering from Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS). This research addresses a critical gap in acute and palliative care for rapidly progressive neurological conditions, where timely discussions about goals of care, intubation preferences, and end-of-life planning are paramount. The study evaluates the feasibility, patient acceptance, and clinical efficacy of using remote video consultations to navigate these complex dialogues, which are often urgent in the setting of respiratory failure—a common terminal event in ALS management that directly involves emergency airway management decisions.
Study Significance: For emergency medicine clinicians, this work underscores the expanding role of telehealth beyond routine follow-ups into high-stakes, time-sensitive decision-making for patients with advanced illnesses. It provides a framework for integrating remote serious illness conversations into emergency and critical care pathways, potentially improving the alignment of acute interventions like rapid sequence induction and mechanical ventilation with patient-centered goals. This approach can refine triage and resource allocation during crises, ensuring that emergency airway management and resuscitation efforts are consistent with informed patient preferences even when in-person specialist consultation is not immediately available.
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