PolicyLab, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA.
Division of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA.
J Dev Behav Pediatr. 2024;45(4):e378-e383. doi: 10.1097/DBP.0000000000001290. Epub 2024 Jul 17.
Owing to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, many developmental-behavioral pediatric (DBP) practices adopted telehealth for care delivery. However, telehealth access and use for families with a preferred language other than English (PLOE) is an equity concern. Therefore, our study objective is to compare rates of telehealth utilization and visit completion by preferred family language among patients seen for DBP assessments during the COVID-19 pandemic.
We completed a descriptive chart review using electronic health record data at 4 academic DBP practices to examine visits for patients up to 5 years seen for new-patient appointments between April 2020 and April 2021. We compared rates of in-person and telehealth visits by preferred family language and visit outcome (completed or missed).
A total of 3241 visits were scheduled between April 2020 and April 2021; 48.2% were for in-person and 51.8% for telehealth. Families reported the following languages: 90.5% English, 6.2% Spanish, and 3.3% other language. Missed visits accounted for 7.6% of scheduled visits. The relative percentage of in-person versus telehealth visits varied significantly by site (p < 0.001) and preferred family language (p < 0.001). English-speaking patients had 2.10 times the odds of being scheduled for telehealth compared with patients with PLOE, adjusting for site. Statistically significant differences were not found for visit outcome (completed or missed) by visit type (in-person or telehealth) (p = 0.79), including after accounting for PLOE status (p = 0.83).
At the height of the pandemic, most English-speaking families were scheduled for new DBP evaluations by telehealth, but fewer families with PLOE were. Attention to language to ensure telehealth access equity is critical.
由于 2019 年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行,许多发育行为儿科(DBP)实践采用远程医疗进行护理。然而,对于首选语言不是英语(PLOE)的家庭来说,远程医疗的获取和使用是一个公平问题。因此,我们的研究目的是比较在 COVID-19 大流行期间接受 DBP 评估的患者中,按首选家庭语言进行远程医疗利用和就诊完成率。
我们使用 4 家学术 DBP 实践的电子健康记录数据完成了描述性图表回顾,以检查 2020 年 4 月至 2021 年 4 月期间新患者预约就诊的 5 岁以下患者的就诊情况。我们比较了首选家庭语言和就诊结果(完成或错过)的门诊和远程医疗就诊率。
在 2020 年 4 月至 2021 年 4 月期间,共安排了 3241 次就诊;48.2%为门诊,51.8%为远程医疗。家庭报告的语言如下:90.5%英语,6.2%西班牙语,3.3%其他语言。错过的就诊占预约就诊的 7.6%。门诊与远程医疗就诊的相对百分比因地点(p < 0.001)和首选家庭语言(p < 0.001)而异。与有 PLOE 的患者相比,讲英语的患者接受远程医疗预约的可能性高 2.10 倍,调整了地点因素。就诊类型(门诊或远程医疗)对就诊结果(完成或错过)(p = 0.79),包括在考虑 PLOE 状况后(p = 0.83),差异无统计学意义。
在大流行高峰期,大多数讲英语的家庭通过远程医疗预约了新的 DBP 评估,但有 PLOE 的家庭预约较少。关注语言以确保远程医疗获取公平性至关重要。