AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study examined whether telehealth (video/phone visits) for patients with cirrhosis results in poorer outcomes compared to traditional in-person care, hypothesizing there would be no significant difference in mortality rates.
  • - A retrospective case-control design analyzed data from veterans diagnosed with cirrhosis, comparing 2,933 patients who died with matched controls still alive, focusing on their tele-health usage prior to death.
  • - Findings indicated that tele-health care was linked to a slight reduction in mortality, suggesting it could be as safe and effective as in-person visits and easing concerns from providers about using virtual care for cirrhosis patients.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Providers and patients have expressed concern that care provided through telehealth results in poorer outcomes than traditional in-person care. On the contrary, we hypothesized that patients with cirrhosis engaging in video/phone-based outpatient gastroenterology/hepatology tele-visits do not differ in mortality from those receiving in-person outpatient clinic visits.

Methods: This was a retrospective, case-control study using Veterans Health Administration administrative data of veterans with a cirrhosis diagnosis. Cases were patients who died between April 2021 and July 2022 and had a cirrhosis diagnosis for ≥1 year before death. For each case, a control was randomly selected from the pool of patients alive on the date of death of the case (index date) and matched on age, average Model for End-Stage Liver Disease, and number of gastroenterology/hepatology clinic visits in the prior year. Primary exposure variable was % tele-visits (video/phone) out of total visits in the year before the index date, scaled in 10% increments. Conditional logistic regression was used to assess the association between mortality and % tele-visits. A secondary analysis matched on electronic Child-Turcotte-Pugh score rather than Model for End-Stage Liver Disease.

Results: Two thousand nine hundred thirty-three cases were identified and matched with 2,933 controls. After adjusting for covariates, tele-visit-based outpatient care was associated with a small reduction in mortality (odds ratio TH = 0.95, 95% confidence interval = 0.94-0.97). Matching on electronic Child-Turcotte-Pugh score did not change the results.

Discussion: Our findings suggest that outpatient cirrhosis care by tele-visit is associated with outcomes no worse than traditional in-person visits. This should reassure providers who hesitate to provide virtual care to patients with cirrhosis due to concerns for poorer outcomes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.14309/ajg.0000000000002979DOI Listing

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