In Cureus
Background Since March 2020, the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic has increased the need for telemedicine to avoid in-person consultations. Online clinics for most diseases officially started in Japan in April 2022. Here, we report the cases of eight Japanese headache patients treated by completely online telemedicine for three months from the first visit. Methodology From the medical records between July 2022 and October 2022, we retrospectively investigated eight consecutive first-visit primary headache patients who consulted our online headache clinic via telemedicine and continued to see us via telemedicine only. The Headache Impact Test-6 (HIT-6) score, monthly headache days (MHD), and monthly acute medication intake days (AMD) were investigated over the observation period. Results A total of eight women were included, and the median (interquartile range) age was 30 (24-51) years. The median HIT-6 scores before, one, and three months after treatment were 63 (58-64), 54 (53-62), and 52 (49-54), respectively. MHD before, one, and three months after treatment were 15 (9-28), 12 (3-17), and 2 (2-8), respectively. AMD before, one, and three months after treatment were 10 (3-13), 3 (1-8), and 2 (0-3), respectively. Significant reductions in HIT-6 and MDH were observed three months after the initial consultation (p = 0.007 and p = 0.042, respectively). AMD was not significantly decreased at three months (p = 0.447). Conclusions This is the first report of Japanese patients treated by completely online telemedicine for three months from the first visit. HIT-6 and MDH can be significantly decreased at three months by only telemedicine. Online telemedicine is expected to be widely used to resolve unmet needs in headache treatment.
Katsuki Masahito
2022-Nov
artificial intelligence, coronavirus disease 2019 (covid-19), information technology, medication-overuse headache (moh), migraine, online telemedicine, tension-type headache