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
Department of Family & Community Medicine, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United States.
Center for Vulnerable Populations, Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United States.
JMIR Form Res. 2022 Mar 10;6(3):e34088. doi: 10.2196/34088.
The 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.
This 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.
We 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).
We 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%, compared to 14.8% of primary care and 12.5% of surgical specialties, P<.001).
Personal device access and department specialty were major factors associated with high telephone and video visit adoption among safety-net clinicians. Desire for training was associated with lower video visit use. Secure device access, clinician technical trainings, and department-wide assessments are priorities for safety-net systems implementing telemedicine.
2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行促使安全网医疗系统在几乎没有先前经验的情况下迅速实施远程医疗服务,导致虚拟就诊的获取存在差异。虽然患者障碍受到了很多关注,但关于影响电话就诊与视频就诊采用情况的系统层面因素却知之甚少。由于远程医疗仍然是患者和提供者首选的服务,而且音频就诊的报销对等将不会持续,医疗系统必须评估如何支持更高质量的视频就诊获取。
本研究旨在评估医疗系统层面的因素及其对电话和视频就诊采用情况的影响,以为门诊安全网机构远程医疗的可持续性提供信息。
2020年5月28日至7月14日,我们在一个与医院相关的门诊诊所网络中对门诊护理临床医生进行了一项横断面调查,该网络服务于多样化的、有公共保险的患者群体。我们进行了双变量分析,评估与以下方面相关的医疗系统层面因素:(1)高电话就诊采用率(每次会话平均4次或更多就诊);(2)视频就诊采用率(每次会话平均至少1次视频就诊)。
我们从643名符合条件的临床医生那里收集了311份回复,回复率为48.4%。临床医生受访者(N = 311)包括34.7%(n = 108)的初级或紧急护理、35.1%(n = 109)的内科以及7.4%(n = 23)的外科专科。我们的样本包括178名(57.2%)高电话就诊采用者和81名(26.05%)视频就诊采用者。在高电话就诊采用者中,72.2%使用个人设备进行远程医疗(而低电话就诊采用者为59.0%,P = 0.04)。未采用视频就诊的医生比采用者要求更多技术方面的培训(49.6%对27.2%,P < 0.001)。初级或紧急护理的高电话就诊采用率最高(84.3%,相比内科的50.4%和外科专科的37.5%,P < 0.001)。内科专科的视频就诊采用率最高(39.1%,相比初级护理的14.8%和外科专科的12.5%,P < 0.001)。
个人设备获取和科室专科是安全网临床医生高电话和视频就诊采用率的主要相关因素。对培训的需求与较低的视频就诊使用率相关。安全设备获取、临床医生技术培训以及全科室评估是实施远程医疗的安全网系统的优先事项。