New York University School of Global Public Health.
Rutgers Center for State Health Policy.
Milbank Q. 2021 Jun;99(2):340-368. doi: 10.1111/1468-0009.12509. Epub 2021 Jun 1.
Policy Points Telehealth has many potential advantages during an infectious disease outbreak such as the COVID-19 pandemic, and the COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated the shift to telehealth as a prominent care delivery mode. Not all health care providers and patients are equally ready to take part in the telehealth revolution, which raises concerns for health equity during and after the COVID-19 pandemic. Without proactive efforts to address both patient- and provider-related digital barriers associated with socioeconomic status, the wide-scale implementation of telehealth amid COVID-19 may reinforce disparities in health access in already marginalized and underserved communities. To ensure greater telehealth equity, policy changes should address barriers faced overwhelmingly by marginalized patient populations and those who serve them.
The COVID-19 pandemic has catalyzed fundamental shifts across the US health care delivery system, including a rapid transition to telehealth. Telehealth has many potential advantages, including maintaining critical access to care while keeping both patients and providers safe from unnecessary exposure to the coronavirus. However, not all health care providers and patients are equally ready to take part in this digital revolution, which raises concerns for health equity during and after the COVID-19 pandemic.
The study analyzed data about small primary care practices' telehealth use and barriers to telehealth use collected from rapid-response surveys administered by the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene's Bureau of Equitable Health Systems and New York University from mid-April through mid-June 2020 as part of the city's efforts to understand how primary care practices were responding to the COVID-19 pandemic following New York State's stay-at-home order on March 22. We focused on small primary care practices because they represent 40% of primary care providers and are disproportionately located in low-income, minority or immigrant areas that were more severely impacted by COVID-19. To examine whether telehealth use and barriers differed based on the socioeconomic characteristics of the communities served by these practices, we used the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Social Vulnerability Index (SVI) to stratify respondents as being in high-SVI or low-SVI areas. We then characterized respondents' telehealth use and barriers to adoption by using means and proportions with 95% confidence intervals. In addition to a primary analysis using pooled data across the five waves of the survey, we performed sensitivity analyses using data from respondents who only took one survey, first wave only, and the last two waves only.
While all providers rapidly shifted to telehealth, there were differences based on community characteristics in both the primary mode of telehealth used and the types of barriers experienced by providers. Providers in high-SVI areas were almost twice as likely as providers in low-SVI areas to use telephones as their primary telehealth modality (41.7% vs 23.8%; P <.001). The opposite was true for video, which was used as the primary telehealth modality by 18.7% of providers in high-SVI areas and 33.7% of providers in low-SVI areas (P <0.001). Providers in high-SVI areas also faced more patient-related barriers and fewer provider-related barriers than those in low-SVI areas.
Between April and June 2020, telehealth became a prominent mode of primary care delivery in New York City. However, the transition to telehealth did not unfold in the same manner across communities. To ensure greater telehealth equity, policy changes should address barriers faced overwhelmingly by marginalized patient populations and those who serve them.
政策要点 在传染病爆发期间,如 COVID-19 大流行期间,远程医疗具有许多潜在优势,COVID-19 大流行加速了远程医疗向突出的护理提供模式的转变。并非所有医疗保健提供者和患者都同样准备好参与远程医疗革命,这引发了对 COVID-19 大流行期间和之后的医疗保健公平性的担忧。如果不积极努力解决与社会经济地位相关的与患者和提供者相关的数字障碍,那么在 COVID-19 期间广泛实施远程医疗可能会加剧已经边缘化和服务不足的社区在获得医疗保健方面的差距。为了确保更大的远程医疗公平性,政策变化应该解决主要由边缘化患者群体和为他们服务的人面临的障碍。
COVID-19 大流行促使美国医疗保健提供系统发生了根本性转变,包括迅速转向远程医疗。远程医疗具有许多潜在优势,包括在保持患者和提供者免受冠状病毒不必要暴露的同时,维持关键的护理机会。然而,并非所有医疗保健提供者和患者都同样准备好参与这场数字革命,这引发了对 COVID-19 大流行期间和之后的医疗保健公平性的担忧。
该研究分析了从 2020 年 4 月中旬到 6 月中旬,纽约市卫生与精神卫生部公平卫生系统局和纽约大学从快速反应调查中收集的有关小型初级保健实践使用远程医疗和使用远程医疗障碍的数据,这是该市了解初级保健实践在纽约州 3 月 22 日发布就地避难令后如何应对 COVID-19 大流行的努力的一部分。我们专注于小型初级保健实践,因为它们占初级保健提供者的 40%,并且不成比例地位于受 COVID-19 影响更严重的低收入、少数民族或移民地区。为了研究远程医疗的使用和障碍是否因这些实践所服务的社区的社会经济特征而有所不同,我们使用疾病控制和预防中心的社会脆弱性指数(SVI)将受访者分为高 SVI 或低 SVI 地区。然后,我们使用平均值和 95%置信区间来描述受访者的远程医疗使用情况和采用障碍。除了使用调查的五个波次的汇总数据进行主要分析外,我们还使用仅进行了一次调查的受访者的数据、仅第一波次的数据和最后两波次的数据进行了敏感性分析。
虽然所有的提供者都迅速转向远程医疗,但基于社区特征,主要使用的远程医疗模式和提供者所经历的障碍类型都存在差异。高 SVI 地区的提供者使用电话作为其主要远程医疗模式的可能性几乎是低 SVI 地区提供者的两倍(41.7%对 23.8%;P<0.001)。相反,视频则是高 SVI 地区的提供者使用的主要远程医疗模式(18.7%)和低 SVI 地区的提供者使用的主要远程医疗模式(33.7%)(P<0.001)。高 SVI 地区的提供者还面临比低 SVI 地区更多的患者相关障碍和更少的提供者相关障碍。
在 2020 年 4 月至 6 月期间,远程医疗成为纽约市初级保健提供的主要模式。然而,社区之间的远程医疗转型并没有以同样的方式展开。为了确保更大的远程医疗公平性,政策变化应该解决主要由边缘化患者群体和为他们服务的人面临的障碍。