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Examining telehealth use among primary care patients, providers, and clinics during the COVID-19 pandemic

Claudia Der‐Martirosian, Karen Chu, W. Neil Steers, Tamar Wyte‐Lake, Michelle D. Balut, Aram Dobalian, Leonie Heyworth, Neil M. Paige, Lucinda B. Leung

2022BMC Primary Care25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: At the onset of COVID-19, there was a rapid expansion of telehealth (video/telephone) visits to maintain delivery of primary care (PC) services at the Veterans Health Administration (VA). This study examines patient, provider, and site-level characteristics of any virtual and video-based care in PC. METHODS: Interrupted time series (ITS) design was conducted using VA administrative/clinical, electronic healthcare data, 12-months before and 12-months after COVID-19 onset (set at March 2020) at the VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System (GLA), between 2019 and 2021. Patients with at least one visit to a VA PC clinic at GLA (n = 547,730 visits) were included in the analysis. The two main outcomes for this study were 1) any telehealth (versus in-person), as well as 2) video-based care (versus telephone). For the ITS analysis, segmented logistic regression on repeated monthly observations of any telehealth and video-based care was used. RESULTS: Percent telehealth and video use increased from 13.9 to 63.1%, and 0.3 to 11.3%, respectively, before to after COVID-19 onset. According to adjusted percentages, GLA community-based clinics (37.7%, versus 29.8% in hospital-based clinics, p < .001), social workers/pharmacists/dietitians (53.7%, versus 34.0% for PC clinicians, p < .001), and minority groups, non-Hispanic African Americans (36.3%) and Hispanics (34.4%, versus 35.3% for Whites, p < .001) were more likely to use telephone than video. Conversely, mental health providers (43.3%) compared to PC clinicians (15.3%), and women (for all age groups, except 75+) compared to men, were more likely to use video than telephone (all p's < .001). CONCLUSIONS: Since telehealth care provision is likely to continue after COVID-19, additional research is needed to identify which PC outpatient services are better suited for telephone (e.g., case management) versus video-based care (e.g., integrated mental health visits). Additionally, it is important to understand how all clinics can systematically increase access to both telephone- and video-based PC services, while ensuring equitable care for all patient populations.

Topics & Concepts

TelehealthMedicineTelemedicineTelepsychiatryPandemicVideoconferencingLogistic regressionHealth careCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Veterans AffairsFamily medicineTelephone interviewInternal medicineDiseaseMultimediaSocial scienceComputer scienceEconomicsSociologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)Economic growthTelemedicine and Telehealth ImplementationCOVID-19 and Mental HealthCOVID-19 and healthcare impacts
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