AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study analyzed video-based primary care usage among over 5.3 million Veterans from April 2020 to March 2022, revealing that 32% of women and 18.6% of men utilized this service.
  • - It found that gender influenced the likelihood of using video care, with men displaying stronger associations related to various demographic and clinical factors, while women’s associations always matched men in direction but varied in strength, particularly for Black Veterans.
  • - Overall, there were fewer disparities in video care adoption between genders, and little difference in how frequently either gender used the service, indicating opportunities to enhance the effectiveness of video visits for all Veterans.

Article Abstract

Women Veterans have unique health care utilization patterns; however, video-based primary care utilization among and between women and men has not been well examined. In a retrospective cohort study, we calculated gender-stratified video visit adoption (i.e., likelihood) and frequency (i.e., rate of use among users) between April 1, 2020, and March 31, 2022, by demographic and clinical characteristics known to impact health care utilization. Among 5,389,139 Veterans (9.2% women), 32% of women and 18.6% of men had a video-based primary care visit over the 2-year study period. Gender interacted with Veteran characteristics and the likelihood of any video care. Men often had associations stronger in magnitude (both positive and negative) than women, including by age, rurality, history of housing instability, mental health conditions, and marital status. The direction of effect never diverged by gender. A positive association among women always coincided with a positive association among men, and vice versa, across all characteristics assessed. Only the risk ratio for video care use comparing Veterans of Black race with White race was stronger among women. In contrast to the video care adoption differences by gender, we found few differences in the frequency of video-based care by gender. The findings suggest there are fewer disparities by demographic and clinical characteristics in any video care use among women compared with men and little to no disparities in the frequency of video care use by gender. Understanding the variation in video care utilization by gender could help improve acceptance, appropriate utilization, and uptake of video-based visits for all.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/jwh.2023.0781DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

video care
24
care utilization
16
care
12
primary care
12
women
9
gender differences
8
care men
8
women veterans
8
health care
8
video-based primary
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!