Patient Characteristics Associated with Telehealth Scheduling and Completion in Primary Care at a Large, Urban Public Healthcare System

被引:0
作者
Kevin Chen
Christine Zhang
Alexandra Gurley
Shashi Akkem
Hannah Jackson
机构
[1] New York City Health + Hospitals,Division of General Internal Medicine and Clinical Innovation
[2] New York University Grossman School of Medicine,undefined
来源
Journal of Urban Health | 2023年 / 100卷
关键词
Telemedicine; Health services accessibility; Healthcare disparities; COVID-19; Access to primary care; Primary health care;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Understanding patient characteristics associated with scheduling and completing telehealth visits can identify potential biases or latent preferences related to telehealth usage. We describe patient characteristics associated with being scheduled for and completing audio and video visits. We used data from patients at 17 adult primary care departments in a large, urban public healthcare system from August 1, 2020 to July 31, 2021. We used hierarchical multivariable logistic regression to generate adjusted odds ratios (aOR) for patient characteristics associated with having been scheduled for and completed telehealth (vs in-person) visits and for video (vs audio) scheduling and completion during two time periods: a telehealth transition period (N = 190,949) and a telehealth elective period (N = 181,808). Patient characteristics were significantly associated with scheduling and completion of telehealth visits. Many associations were similar across time periods, but others changed over time. Patients who were older (≥ 65 years old vs 18–44 years old: aOR for scheduling 0.53/completion 0.48), Black (0.86/0.71), Hispanic (0.76/0.62), or had Medicaid (0.93/0.84) were among those less likely to be scheduled for or complete video (vs audio) visits. Patients with activated patient portals (1.97/3.34) or more visits (≥ 3 scheduled visits vs 1 visit: 2.40/1.52) were more likely to be scheduled for or complete video visits. Variation in scheduling/completion explained by patient characteristics was 7.2%/7.5%, clustering by provider 37.2%/34.9%, and clustering by facility 43.1%/37.4%. Stable and dynamic associations suggest persistent gaps in access and evolving preferences/biases. Variation explained by patient characteristics was relatively low compared with that explained by provider and facility clustering.
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页码:468 / 477
页数:9
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