Background: Telehealth is increasingly used to provide specialty consultations to infants and children receiving care. However, there is uncertainty if the COVID-19 pandemic has influenced the use of telehealth among vulnerable populations.
Objective: This research aims to compare the overall use of tele-urgent care visits for pediatric patients before and after the pandemic, especially among vulnerable populations.
Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional analysis of pediatric tele-urgent care visits at a virtual care center at a southeastern health care center. The main outcome of this study was the use of pediatrics tele-urgent visits across geographical regions with different levels of social disparities and between 2019 and 2020.
Results: Of 584 tele-urgent care visits, 388 (66.4%) visits occurred in 2020 during the pandemic compared to 196 (33.6%) visits in 2019. Among 808 North Carolina zip codes, 181 (22%) consisted of a high concentration of vulnerable populations, where 17.7% (56/317) of the tele-urgent care visits originated from. The majority (215/317, 67.8%) of tele-urgent care visits originated from zip codes with a low concentration of vulnerable populations. There was a significant association between the rate of COVID-19 cases and the concentration level of social factors in a given Zip Code Tabulation Area.
Conclusions: The use of tele-urgent care visits for pediatric care doubled during the COVID-19 pandemic. The majority of the tele-urgent care visits after COVID-19 originated from regions where there is a low presence of vulnerable populations. In addition, our geospatial analysis found that geographic regions with a high concentration of vulnerable populations had a significantly higher rate of COVID-19-confirmed cases and deaths compared to regions with a low concentration of vulnerable populations.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/25873 | DOI Listing |
Online J Public Health Inform
January 2024
UNC Health, Morrisville, NC, United States.
Background: Health systems rapidly adopted telemedicine as an alternative health care delivery modality in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Demographic factors, such as age and gender, may play a role in patients' choice of a phone or video visit. However, it is unknown whether there are differences in utilization between phone and video visits.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: The coronavirus 2019 pandemic (COVID-19) has resulted in major changes in lifestyle practices and healthcare delivery. The goal of this study was to examine changes in practice and service outcomes in a telehealth program before and after the federal and private telehealth policy expansion during the COVID-19 pandemic. These findings are particularly useful to understand what may be needed to overcome telehealth challenges in future disasters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStud Health Technol Inform
January 2022
UNC Health - Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Novel methods are needed to evaluate the perceptions of patients using telehealth. Automated text processing methods presents a golden opportunity to classify and analyze unstructured survey responses from patients. This study analyzed 585 unstructured entries from telehealth patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Gen Intern Med
March 2022
Penn Medicine Center for Health Care Innovation, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Background: Care delivered using telemedicine has been steadily growing in the USA but represented a small fraction of overall visits before the COVID-19 pandemic as few clinicians had been providing care using telemedicine. Understanding how experienced clinicians have practiced telemedicine can help guide today's exponential adoption of telemedicine.
Objective: The objective of this study was to explore barriers and facilitators to providing effective, high-quality urgent care using telemedicine ("tele-urgent care") from the perspective of clinicians experienced in telemedicine.
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