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Are We Reaching Everyone? A Cross-Sectional Study of Telehealth Inequity in the COVID-19 Pandemic in an Urban Academic Pediatric Primary Care Clinic

Rachel B. Schenker, Meredith C. Laguna, Anobel Y. Odisho, Megumi J. Okumura, Honora Quinn Burnett

2021Clinical Pediatrics35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) pandemic brought rapid expansion of pediatric telehealth to maintain patient access to care while decreasing COVID-19 community spread. We designed a retrospective, serial, cross-sectional study to investigate if telehealth implementation at an academic pediatric practice led to disparities in health care access. Significant differences were found in pre-COVID-19 versus during COVID-19 patient demographics. Patients seen during COVID-19 were more likely to be younger, White/Caucasian or Asian, English speaking, and have private insurance. They were less likely to be Black/African American or Latinx and request interpreters. Age was the only significant difference in patient demographics between in-person and telehealth visits during COVID-19. A multivariate regression showed older age as a significant positive predictor of having a video visit and public insurance as a significant negative predictor. Our study demonstrates telehealth disparities based on insurance existed at our clinic as did inequities in who was seen before versus during COVID-19.

Topics & Concepts

TelehealthMedicinePandemicCross-sectional studyEthnic groupDemographicsFamily medicineCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Public healthHealth equityRetrospective cohort studyHealth carePublic health insuranceSocioeconomic statusTelemedicineDemographyDiseaseEnvironmental healthHealth insuranceNursingInternal medicineInfectious disease (medical specialty)AnthropologyEconomic growthSociologyPopulationEconomicsPathologyTelemedicine and Telehealth ImplementationCOVID-19 and healthcare impactsPatient Satisfaction in Healthcare