Introduction

At the end of 2019, China Government reported a cluster of cases of pneumonia in people associated with the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market in Wuhan, Hubei Province [1]. On January 7, 2020, Chinese health authorities confirmed that these cases were due to a novel coronavirus, called 2019-nCoV [2], able to a person-to-person transmission [3]. In the following weeks slightly less than 10 similar cases had been reported in 21 countries [4]. From many sources arrived at World Governments the call to reduce interpersonal contacts both in everyday life and in healthcare [5, 6]. In chronic and frail patients, this would mean to reduce as much as possible their access to hospitals, considered places a high risk for contagion [7]. Furthermore, all not emergent medical conditions and all deferrable evaluations had to be thus postponed in preserving all available resources for pandemic effort, since reduction or cancellation of routine services can mobilize resources and staff to cope with the emergency due to pandemic [8].

On March 10th, 2020, Italian Government declared the emergency status and the lockdown of all activities to reduce the spread of transmission of SARS-COV2 virus, responsible of the syndrome known as COVID-19 [9].

Since the early beginning it had been clearly showed by first epidemiological analysis how age and preexisting comorbidities represented negative predictive factors associated with a bad outcomes in patients affected by COVID infection [10]. Already a forerunner meta-analysis, performed in China on more than 1500 patients, recognized the three more prevalent comorbidities affecting COVID-19 patients in hypertension, cardio-cerebrovascular disease and diabetes. Furthermore, diabetes and hypertension determine a twofold increase in the risk of need for Intensive care unit [11].

Diabetic Foot (DF) represents the main cause of hospital admission and of face-to-face visits, both in election and in emergent conditions. Such patients are usually affected by multiple comorbidities and therefore even more frail. Moreover, the causative pathologies are subtle so that the local state can abruptly precipitate also in patients regularly followed and adhering to given indications [12].

The unavoidable delay or cancellation of many face-to-face visits and clinical services created a potential danger in patients with active ulceration, ischemia or other DF-related conditions, such as Charcot disease, that needed frequent clinical evaluation. This delay had also stopped any primary or secondary prevention activity, thus reducing our effectiveness in preventing ulcerations. Fear for COVID had actually convinced many patients with new acute disease to delay their access in hospital, increasing the severity of the clinical status and limiting our possibilities in limb salvage [13].

During lockdown period, our DF clinic had to strictly select patients and reserve face-to-face visits to those with critical limb ischemia or acute infection who required urgent surgical procedures. For all the other patients there was the need to rethink a way to remain in contact, not exposing the patients to COVID risk.

In such a context, Tuscany Health Authorities gave to Diabetologist and Diabetic foot care specialist the possibility to manage chronic patients through a dedicated system of telemedicine, supplying both software and hardware for a program of telemedicine, that we used to maintain a contact with our patients in need of close monitoring [14, 15].

Aim of the study

Aims of our study were to evaluate the patients’ perception of the telemedicine experience during lockdown, and to esteem their level of anxiety towards DF and COVID, respectively.

Patients and methods

In the last week of May 2020, all patients who had undergone to televisits during lockdown (March and April) were contacted again by phone by the same investigator (E.I.) and submitted to a questionnaire, as reported in Table 1. The questionnaire focused the remote monitoring interaction occurred during lockdown through questions inquiring if patients remembered the call, the topic of the call and the person who talked to, or if they were alone during the call. We evaluated also if patients who remember the monitoring visit and its characteristics eventually differed for demographic and clinical parameters from those who did not remember. We asked furthermore to give a score, ranging from 1, meaning not at all, to 5, meaning completely yes, to their opinion on the possibility to continue televisits also after the end of pandemic period.

Table 1 Phone interview administered to patients

The questionnaire investigated moreover, once again through the same pattern, about patient’s anxiety about diabetic foot and COVID infection.

As per standard protocol of our hospital, patients during the monitoring had provided formal oral consent to the introduction of their data in a database and to their non-nominal use in an aggregate form.

Statistical analysis

Quantitative variables are expressed as mean and standard deviation, while qualitative variables as frequencies and percentages. Data were compared with Chi-square and Fisher’s exact test for the categorical data and with Student t test for the continuous variables. The statistical analysis was performed with the SAS software (SAS Institute, Cary, NC). A p value of less than 0.05 was considered statistically significant.

Results

We performed 257 remote monitoring visits in 211 different patients (1.22 visit/patient). The cohort was mainly composed by male patients (64.9%) and had a mean age of 73 ± 11 years.

Two hundred and six patients (97.6%) accepted to be interviewed. The characteristics of these patients are reported in Table 2; they were still predominantly male (64.6%), and had a mean age of 72 ± 10 years. They were affected by diabetes, with a mean duration of 18 ± 6 years and had had their first diabetic foot episode 12 ± 8 years ago. Among the patients who underwent interview, 74 (35.9%) had an active chronic ulcer, 98 (47.6%) were followed in secondary prevention and 34 (16.5%) were in primary prevention.

Table 2 Characteristics of the patients who underwent to phone interview

Characteristics of phone interviews

The first part of the interview investigated what patients remembered of the remote monitoring interaction: as reported in Fig. 1, 177 patients (85.9%) remembered the remote monitoring visit during the lockdown, 140 (67.9%) were able to mention whom they talked to and 181 patients (87.9%) reminded the reason why they had been contacted.

Fig. 1
figure 1

What patients remember about remote monitoring visit during lockdown

Regarding the differences between patients who remember the monitoring visit and those who did not remember. We found that patients who did not remember the remote monitoring and its reason were significantly more frequently male (72.4% vs. 61.6% p < 0.01 and 68.0% vs. 61.2% p < 0.01) and older (73 ± 11 vs. 68 ± 13 p < 0.01 and 77 ± 10 vs. 71 ± 12 p < 0.01). No difference between patients who remembered the name of the person they interacted with and those who did not remember. Analyzing instead patients with previous ulceration or amputation we observed that all amputated patients remember the monitoring (p < 0.01).

We then asked to the patient if someone assisted them in the monitoring visit during lockdown: as reported in Fig. 2, 169 patients (82.1%) were alone during the visit, 24 patients (11.7%) performed it with their partner, for 10 patients (4.8%) was present also a son or daughter and eventually 3 patients (1.5%) made the visit with a grandson or another relative.

Fig. 2
figure 2

Participants at remote monitoring visit during lockdown

Patients’ satisfaction for telemedicine interaction

As reported in Fig. 3, patients judged the telemedicine contact during pandemic useful, assigning a mean score of 4.35 ± 0.28 on a maximum of five. They considered useful also the indications given by the specialist regarding how to manage with foot care, obtaining a score of 4.11 ± 0.22 on a maximum of five. And eventually, when we asked the patients about their availability in continuing this contact modality, in parallel to traditional outpatient visits, also after end of lockdown, they demonstrated a very positive opinion, giving a score of 4.34 ± 0.23 on a maximum of five.

Fig. 3
figure 3

Patients’ satisfaction about remote monitoring visit during lockdown

Awareness and fear for COVID and for diabetic foot

Eventually, also through a score ranging from 1, meaning not at all, to 5, meaning completely yes, we investigated awareness and fear of patients regarding both diabetic foot and COVID infection. In the whole cohort the fear of diabetic foot was significantly higher when compared to fear of COVID (4.79 ± 0.05 vs. 3.27 ± 1.03, p < 0.05). We went then to analyze the subset of patients with a history of ulceration or an active ulcer. In these patients, the fear for diabetic foot was even higher versus fear for COVID (4.84 ± 0.03 vs. 3.03 ± 1.13, p < 0.05). Eventually, the difference was even higher when comparing only values obtained by patients with a previous amputation (4.93 ± 0.03 vs. 2.73 ± 1.21, p < 0.05). The differences in fear between the two diseases is 1.52 in the cohort as a whole and increases to 1.81 in previously ulcerated patients (p < 0.02 vs. general population) and to 2.20 in previously amputated patients (p < 0.02 vs. previous amputated patients and versus the whole cohort) (Fig. 4).

Fig. 4
figure 4

Fear of COVID and fear of DF compared in different groups of general population

Discussion

Our study demonstrated how telemedicine can be well perceived by DF patients as a possible alternative to traditional visits and in the same time highlights how DF is more “heavy” than COVID in the patient’s life.

DF syndrome is from many point of view a paradigmatic disease. From the beginning it is a typical multifactorial disease, where genetics and environment act together. From a clinical point of view, DF is, among the chronic complication of diabetes, the one where is needed the higher level of co-operation between the healthcare professionals and the patient [16].

COVID-19 pandemic interfered with this dynamic, leaving de facto many patients without care [17]. In this context, telemedicine was an alternative solution to continue to follow DF patients and in the same time to reduce their exposure to the risk of contagion [18].

Yet before COVID remote monitoring programs have been developed for patients with chronic wounds who could not reach hospital. The first steps of these programs were the activation of specialized home nurses to create the so called “Hospital at home” that allowed to deliver hospital-level care at home at these patients [19]. This strategy allowed to reduce hospital controls and readmissions to one fifth [20]. Teot et al. demonstrated that the remote monitoring approach, when well organized and associated with a correct patients’ selection, could guarantee an outcome in terms of rate and time of healing at 6 months similar to that obtained with a traditional domiciliary nurse service [21]. The increasing development of such programs made it mandatory the test of patients’ safety: Rasmussen demonstrated that teleconsulting was able to achieve levels of healing and to control the level of amputation similar to face-to-face visits, despite a moderate higher mortality [22].

Despite the use of telemedicine is widespread among different specialistic fields, with general good outcomes in terms of efficacy and efficiency, still little is known about the patient’s perception and level of satisfaction on this modality [23,24,25].

Our experience put in evidence how among DF patients’ telemedicine is well perceived and accepted. Patients were in favor of continuing televisits also as an ongoing modality in parallel with traditional visits, also after the end of lock-down, and this reinforce the acceptancy of this approach.

Eventually, a novel issue focused in our paper is the comparison between awareness of risk associated with DF and to COVID infection in the patients’ perception. When we analyzed our cohort as a whole the fear of patients for DF was significantly higher than the one for COVID. This discrepancy increased even further in previously ulcerated patients and in patients with an history of amputation.

In recent years, the study of psychological factors in patients with DF raised an increasing attention. Psychological patterns have been associated with changes in both patient’s compliance and clinical outcome. Vileikyte and her coworkers recently associated the fear of patients for amputation to a better preventative foot self-care behavior [26].

Future perspective in this field are wide and significant: reducing the number of traditional visits in favor of remote monitoring is helpful not only in pandemic period but also after lockdown especially in patients frail, often bedridden, and in whom the simple transport to hospital can significantly decrease the quality of life. For this reason, as recommended by Tuscany health authority, we are implementing this program to maintain it active also after the end of COVID emergency and to normalize in our chronic patients this contact modality. We are aware of the limitations of this study, a retrospective survey on a limited number of patients from only one center, which hamper the generalizability of findings. Nevertheless, we find results worthwhile to be communicated, since they give information on an experience which is bound to be very common in the management of DF patients.

DF actually is not only a chronic disease, but a recurrent disease and as well-known after each new episode the severity of the disease increases progressively [27]. Therefore, enhancing the possibilities of contacts with these patients could allow us to implement a more efficient follow-up program. From this point of view telemedicine can be considered as a new tool for secondary prevention, to be integrated in the multidimensional therapeutic strategy for such a complex patient.