Price Sarah T, Mainous Arch G, Rooks Benjamin J
Department of Family Medicine, Medical University of South Carolina, 135 Cannon Street, Suite 405 MSC 192, Charleston 29425, USA.
Department of Community Health and Family Medicine, University of Florida, 1329 SW 16 Street 4270, Gainesville 32608, USA.
Prev Med Rep. 2022 Mar 17;27:101769. doi: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2022.101769. eCollection 2022 Jun.
The COVID-19 pandemic resulted in rapid implementation of telehealth within primary care impacting cancer screening. We sought to assess the impact of increased telehealth use on physician recommendation for cancer screenings during the COVID-19 pandemic in North America. Primary care physicians (n = 757) were surveyed in Fall 2020 through the Council of Academic Family Medicine's Educational Research Alliance (CERA) general membership survey. Respondents were asked about cancer screening practices and telehealth services during the COVID-19 pandemic. Chi-squared tests were performed to assess relationships between cancer screening practices and changes in care necessitated by the shift to telehealth services. Associations between participant responses and those reporting a diminished patient-provider relationship were assessed with multivariable logistic regression. A substantial proportion of respondents reported postponing screening for breast (34.5%), colon (32.9%), and cervical cancer (31%), and a majority (51.1%) agreed changes in care seeking will lead to increased incidence of late stage cancer. Physicians reported high use of telehealth during the pandemic, but endorsed limitations in its use to maintain cancer screening practices and the patient-provider relationship. Physicians who reported patients were afraid to come into the office were more likely to report an impaired patient-provider relationship (OR = 2.77, 95% CI: 1.33 - 7.87). Physicians who reported that telehealth maintains their patient-provider relationship were less likely to report an impaired patient-provider relationship (OR = 0.33, 95% CI: 0.17 - 0.67). As telehealth becomes increasingly prominent, evaluation of the impact of telehealth on cancer screening and patient-provider relationships will be increasingly important for primary care.
新冠疫情导致初级保健中迅速实施远程医疗,这对癌症筛查产生了影响。我们试图评估在北美新冠疫情期间,远程医疗使用增加对医生推荐癌症筛查的影响。2020年秋季,通过学术家庭医学理事会教育研究联盟(CERA)的普通会员调查,对757名初级保健医生进行了调查。受访者被问及新冠疫情期间的癌症筛查实践和远程医疗服务。进行卡方检验以评估癌症筛查实践与转向远程医疗服务所必需的护理变化之间的关系。使用多变量逻辑回归评估参与者反应与报告医患关系减弱者之间的关联。很大一部分受访者报告推迟了乳腺癌(34.5%)、结肠癌(32.9%)和宫颈癌(31%)的筛查,大多数(51.1%)人同意寻求护理的变化将导致晚期癌症发病率增加。医生报告在疫情期间远程医疗的使用率很高,但认可在使用中存在局限性,以维持癌症筛查实践和医患关系。报告患者害怕来办公室的医生更有可能报告医患关系受损(比值比=2.77,95%置信区间:1.33 - 7.87)。报告远程医疗维持了医患关系的医生不太可能报告医患关系受损(比值比=0.33,95%置信区间:0.17 - 0.67)。随着远程医疗变得越来越突出,评估远程医疗对癌症筛查和医患关系的影响对初级保健将变得越来越重要。