| Literature DB >> 32479413 |
J Nwando Olayiwola1, Candy Magaña1, Ashley Harmon1, Shalina Nair1, Erica Esposito2, Christine Harsh2, L Arick Forrest3, Randy Wexler1.
Abstract
The coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic has accelerated the telehealth tipping point in the practice of family medicine and primary care in the United States, making telehealth not just a novel approach to care but also a necessary one for public health safety. Social distancing requirements and stay-at-home orders have shifted patient care from face-to-face consultations in primary care offices to virtual care from clinicians' homes or offices, moving to a new frontline, which we call the "frontweb." Our telehealth workgroup employed the Clinical Transformation in Technology implementation framework to accelerate telehealth expansion and to develop a consensus document for clinician recommendations in providing remote virtual care during the pandemic. In a few weeks, telehealth went from under 5% of patient visits to almost 93%, while maintaining high levels of patient satisfaction. In this paper, we share clinician recommendations and guidance gleaned from this transition to the frontweb and offer a systematic approach for ensuring "webside" success. ©J Nwando Olayiwola, Candy Magaña, Ashley Harmon, Shalina Nair, Erica Esposito, Christine Harsh, L Arick Forrest, Randy Wexler. Originally published in JMIR Public Health and Surveillance (http://publichealth.jmir.org), 25.06.2020.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; infectious disease; outbreak; pandemic; primary care; public health; telehealth; telemedicine
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32479413 PMCID: PMC7318864 DOI: 10.2196/19045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Public Health Surveill ISSN: 2369-2960
Summary of COVID-19 telehealth visit acceleration in the Department of Family Medicine, Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center (the denominator for all percentages is defined as the number of total visits [in person + video + telephone]).
| Weeka,b | Visits, N | Telehealth visitsc, n (%) | In-person visits, n (%) | Video visits, n (%) | Telephone visits, n (%) |
| 03/01/20 | 2822 | 4 (0.1) | 2818 (99.9) | 4 (0.1) | 0 (0) |
| 03/29/20 | 1814 | 1666 (91.8) | 148 (8.2) | 386 (21.3) | 1280 (70.5) |
| 04/26/20 | 2104 | 1947 (92.5) | 157 (7.5) | 1481 (70.4) | 466 (22.1) |
aData shown here represent 4-week intervals.
bWeek 03/01 represents pre-COVID operations data. Week 3/29 represents the official launch of video visits across the entire medical center. Weeks 03/01 to 03/29 represents a shift from majority in-person visits to majority virtual telehealth visits overall (phone and video). Weeks 03/29 to 04/26 represents a shift from majority phone visits to majority video visits for all virtual telehealth visits overall.
cTelehealth visits include patient visits conducted by Family Medicine physicians and nurse practitioners through tVisits or vVisits (telephone or video); does not include data from Behavioral Health, Clinical Pharmacy, Nutrition or other clinicians.