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System-Level Factors Associated With Telephone and Video Visit Use: Survey of Safety-Net Clinicians During the Early Phase of the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Authors :
Sharma, Anjana E
Sharma, Anjana E
Khoong, Elaine C
Sierra, Maribel
Rivadeneira, Natalie A
Nijagal, Malini A
Su, George
Lyles, Courtney R
DeFries, Triveni
Tuot, Delphine S
Sarkar, Urmimala
Sharma, Anjana E
Sharma, Anjana E
Khoong, Elaine C
Sierra, Maribel
Rivadeneira, Natalie A
Nijagal, Malini A
Su, George
Lyles, Courtney R
DeFries, Triveni
Tuot, Delphine S
Sarkar, Urmimala
Source :
JMIR formative research; vol 6, iss 3, e34088; 2561-326X
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

BackgroundThe COVID-19 pandemic prompted safety-net health care systems to rapidly implement telemedicine services with little prior experience, causing disparities in access to virtual visits. While much attention has been given to patient barriers, less is known regarding system-level factors influencing telephone versus video-visit adoption. As telemedicine remains a preferred service for patients and providers, and reimbursement parity will not continue for audio visits, health systems must evaluate how to support higher-quality video visit access.ObjectiveThis study aimed to assess health system-level factors and their impact on telephone and video visit adoption to inform sustainability of telemedicine for ambulatory safety-net sites.MethodsWe conducted a cross-sectional survey among ambulatory care clinicians at a hospital-linked ambulatory clinic network serving a diverse, publicly insured patient population between May 28 and July 14, 2020. We conducted bivariate analyses assessing health care system-level factors associated with (1) high telephone adoption (4 or more visits on average per session); and (2) video visit adoption (at least 1 video visit on average per session).ResultsWe collected 311 responses from 643 eligible clinicians, yielding a response rate of 48.4%. Clinician respondents (N=311) included 34.7% (n=108) primary or urgent care, 35.1% (n=109) medical, and 7.4% (n=23) surgical specialties. Our sample included 178 (57.2%) high telephone adopters and 81 (26.05%) video adopters. Among high telephone adopters, 72.2% utilized personal devices for telemedicine (vs 59.0% of low telephone adopters, P=.04). Video nonadopters requested more training in technical aspects than adopters (49.6% vs 27.2%, P<.001). Primary or urgent care had the highest proportion of high telephone adoption (84.3%, compared to 50.4% of medical and 37.5% of surgical specialties, P<.001). Medical specialties had the highest proportion of video adoption (39.1%, compare

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
JMIR formative research; vol 6, iss 3, e34088; 2561-326X
Notes :
application/pdf, JMIR formative research vol 6, iss 3, e34088 2561-326X
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1367466902
Document Type :
Electronic Resource