These are strange times.
For the past several years I have attended seminars on telepsychiatry.
In Minnesota, we have an expert who has been doing it for a long time. He talks
about the advantages of being an independent practitioner and using your own
equipment rather than being a subcontractor. He has a definite method that
includes seeing all of his patients in person at least once a year. His
practice covers a large area that would otherwise probably not have a lot of
psychiatric services. Over the years that I have been going to the seminars, I
have thought about private practice and Telepsychiatry. I even looked at a storefront building at a shopping mall and fantasized about starting it up. But I
am too close to retirement and there is a thing called tail coverage. That
means if you carry malpractice insurance and retire you need to still pay
the premium for two or three years into retirement in the event that you are
sued. That was a major deterrent and it
seemed like I would just carry on in my current position until I decided to quit.
And then the coronavirus and social isolation hit.
The transition to Telepsychiatry rapidly happened last
Thursday. I was going about my day when my younger colleague told me that she
was switching to Telepsychiatry this week. She encouraged me to get on board.
Several people were critical to the effort and I was up to speed on the system
by this weekend. I had to confirm that I had the computer power, bandwidth, and
dropped frame rate consistent with software. I pulled up my schedule this
morning and the main difference I was sitting at home looking at it on my big
Mac Pro. I tested the camera and microphone. It produced a good image of me
sitting in my home office and I was ready to go. What followed was a big glitch
and some realizations about the visual aspects of psychiatry.
An initial series of emails let me know that the visual
feed was not working. That essentially took out the software and as a
replacement I was supposed to do telephone interviews. Hoping that they could
get it up and running I moved the first patient new evaluation to the last slot
in the daytime. There was some suggestion that only follow-ups should be seen as
telephone interviews. I was concerned that patients would have to hold the
telephone receiver for 45 to 60 minutes but was reassured that it would all
happen over speakerphone. The locations were all secure and managed by our
clinical administrator. When it became apparent that the visual feed would not
occur I started doing new assessments and follow-ups strictly on the telephone.
In retrospect I found myself myself in an ironic position. For years I
studied telephone switching both as a high-tech investor and as electronics
hobbyist. I eventually got involved in communications theory. The engineering
version of communications theory is highly technical and interesting but I have
never been able to apply it to the clinical interview. The clinical interview
is an exchange of information. There is always a certain noise level that varies significantly from person to person. That noise can occur strictly on the
information being exchanged or various
emotional levels that can add or subtract from the overall noise level. A good
example would be a person who brings a lot of biases into the interview. As an example,
I have had people slow the interview down or bring it to a halt just based on
my physical appearance and how it was interpreted. Some of those people would be
very explicit in telling me they could only work with a psychiatrist who had a
certain religion, philosophical bent, or political affiliation. There was often
speculation, that I did not meet the preferred categories. Interviews done
without the visual channel, removed those factors.
I dictate all my valuations and follow-ups and have done that most of my career. Critical parts of what has become known as the Mental Status Exam are dependent visual assessment. A few examples of common bullet points include:
Appearance: I comment on whether
the person appears to be alert, interactive, their overall grooming and hygiene,
their eye contact and social demeanor. Where it applies I also comment on
whether they appear to be intoxicated, distracted, potentially delirious, and
in some situations whether they realize I am in the room with them.
Psychomotor: Hyperkinetic and
hypokinetic movements and possible movement disorders need to be described.
Psychomotor agitation and retardation as well as motor restlessness also need
to be commented on. It is about a 40 foot walk to my office and the person’s gait
also needs to be described. Gait
analysis is useful because of the association with dementias, neurological
disorders, and medication side effects. It is also useful in assessing chronic pain
patients. The commonest acute pain disorder I notice is gout due to its high
prevalence in men of all ages. Specific movements require additional
examination in some cases rating scales. For example if tardive dyskinesia is
noted and AIMS (Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale) can be done to determine a
baseline score. There are additional rating scales for Parkinson’s, akathisia,
tics, and dystonia.
Affect: Psychopathologists like Sims
have pointed out the subtle differences between affect and mood. In his text for
example he describes affect as “differentiated specific feelings directed
toward objects”. Mood is described as “a more prolonged prevailing state or
disposition”. He comments that both terms are used “more or less
interchangeably”. Modern use is much more basic and it has to do with direct
observation of the patient’s emotional expression, the specific context, and
whether or not it may be consistent with an underlying phasic mood disturbance. A common error I notice in many descriptions is that the time domain is omitted - people never seem to comment on the affective state over the course of the interview or the fact that the patient's affect appears to be completely normal - despite the assessment being done for a mood or anxiety disorder.
If you are interviewing people by telephone rather than
Telepsychiatry, you don’t have access to any of those three critical
domains as well as other parameters that might be important. For example, vital
signs, focal physical examination, and the overall determination about whether
or not a patient may be physically ill or critically ill just based on their
appearance. There is also a pattern
matching aspect to psychiatric diagnosis. After psychiatrist has evaluated
hundreds or thousands of patients, certain patterns are evident that can
facilitate diagnosis. The most obvious one is delirium. It has always been a
mystery to me why that diagnosis is so difficult for a lot of people to make.
Once you have seen a few delirious people, the pattern seems obvious. Other findings are much more subtle. An example might be a patient appears to be in
pain but also does not want to disclose the source of that pain. It could be a
self-inflicted injury or injury from intimate partner violence. Those findings
would be very difficult to pick up over a telephone interview.
A couple of examples come to mind when I think of
critically ill patients who did not come to see me because they were critically
ill. The first was a patient who looked the whitest I had ever seen a person. I
asked him if he was physically ill and he denied it. I asked him about possible
causes of blood loss and that was also denied. He did eventually allow me to
order a complete blood count. I got the results back his hemoglobin was
extremely low and when I called him - he did acknowledged some
symptoms of G.I. blood loss and agreed to go to the emergency department. He was
subsequently found to have a gastric ulcer. In another case I was talking with
the patient appeared to be physically ill. He seemed to have some abdominal
distress. He allowed for a limited exam of his abdomen and appeared to have right upper quadrant pain and tenderness. He was also referred to the emergency department and
had acute cholecystitis and required surgery. Both of these scenarios depend on
how the patient actually looks to the psychiatrist and that is why the visual
presentation is so important.
Many people think that psychiatry is an exchange of words.
A common myth these days is that these words allow people to be grouped into
diagnoses based on other sentences and phrases. A discussion between two people
is always much more than that. When a psychiatrist is in the room the
discussion is between two people one of whom has memories of tens of thousands
of important patterns and findings that mean something. A significant number of those
patterns are visual rather than strictly verbal.
I have lost count about how many times a rapid visual diagnosis played a critical part in the diagnostic process. When I see a patient with serotonin syndrome or neuroleptic malignant syndrome or malignant catatonia - I am not running down the diagnostic criteria in my head. I am thinking that they are critically ill probably have a specific diagnosis - but I have to get them somewhere fast where they can receive the necessary supportive care while that diagnosis is clarified and treated. Most of that is a visual process based on what I have seen in the past. In most cases, the diagnosis occurs in seconds to minutes.
I have lost count about how many times a rapid visual diagnosis played a critical part in the diagnostic process. When I see a patient with serotonin syndrome or neuroleptic malignant syndrome or malignant catatonia - I am not running down the diagnostic criteria in my head. I am thinking that they are critically ill probably have a specific diagnosis - but I have to get them somewhere fast where they can receive the necessary supportive care while that diagnosis is clarified and treated. Most of that is a visual process based on what I have seen in the past. In most cases, the diagnosis occurs in seconds to minutes.
I thought the telephone interviews went well. My notetaking
was as intense as ever. I am looking at an average of about six pages of
handwritten notes that I base my dictations on. But I know the process can be much
better. Telepsychiatry is superior to telephone psychiatry, and I hope to find out how close it is to a face-to-face interview.
Hopefully that visual feed will be there tomorrow.
George Dawson, MD, DFAPA