Telemedicine Reports (Jun 2023)

Assessment of Patient Risk Profiles by a Male Sexual Health Direct-to-Consumer Prescription Platform: A Cross-Sectional Study

  • Moritz von B?ren,
  • Christian W?lfing,
  • Daniel Schlager,
  • Max Michael Tr?ger,
  • Marcel Daoud,
  • Florian Schr?der,
  • Sabine D. Brookman-May,
  • Christian Gratzke,
  • Johannes von B?ren

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1089/TMR.2023.0010
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
pp. 118 – 125

Abstract

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Background: Direct-to-consumer (DTC) online prescription platforms (OPP) for sexual health represent a potential paradigm shift in the diagnosis and treatment for sexual dysfunctions in the way men seek care. Knowledge of patients' risk profile using these platforms is limited. Aim: To assess risk profiles of patients reaching out to health care professionals through their DTC. Methods: Anonymized data originally collected between February 2021 to May 2022 by a DTC platform in the men's health care space were retrospectively analyzed. Data included the content of patient requests through a communication function, as well as the corresponding responses by the attending physician on staff. Each request was then assessed by two independent urologists and categorized by the level of the risk profile as well as the need to refer the patient to further medical evaluation. Results: Of 585 patient requests, 531 (90.8%) were classified as low risk. In the high-risk group, 32 patients were recommended to schedule an urgent appointment at a specialist. Only three patients (0.5%) were advised to seek emergency care. The overall referral rate for both risk groups was 52.3%. The requests of 279 patients (47.7%) were assessed as digitally treatable. Almost all patients who were digitally treatable were low risk. Side effects accounted for only 9.6% of all requests in the low-risk group, compared with 46.3% in the high-risk group. Conclusion: Overall, low-risk levels in the requests of patients using a DTC platform were reported, with almost half of them suitable to be solved digitally, whereas the other half required referral to an in-person specialist.

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