| Literature DB >> 34751158 |
Emily Louise Vogt1,2, Brandon M Welch3,4, Brian E Bunnell4,5, Janelle F Barrera4,5, Samantha R Paige4, Marisa Owens6, Patricia Coffey6, Nancy Diazgranados2, David Goldman2,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While telemedicine has been expanding over the past decade, the COVID-19-related restrictions regarding in-person care have led to unprecedented levels of telemedicine utilization. To the authors' knowledge, no studies to date have quantitatively analyzed both national and regional trends in telemedicine utilization during the pandemic, both of which have key implications for informing health policy.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; health policy; impact; observational; policy; retrospective; telehealth; telemedicine; trend; utilization
Year: 2022 PMID: 34751158 PMCID: PMC8797150 DOI: 10.2196/29880
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Interact J Med Res ISSN: 1929-073X
Figure 1The total number of session minutes per month logged on the doxy.me platform from January to November 2020. These data demonstrate that while monthly minutes peaked in April at 291 million minutes, the high level of utilization largely plateaued from May to November.
Figure 2The average session length per doxy.me provider per month from January to November 2020. These results elucidate the dramatic decrease in telemedicine session length (P<.001) at the onset of the pandemic, from February to March. From April to November, the average telemedicine session length normalized back to pre–COVID-19 levels with the average session length during November not significantly lower than in January (P=.10). Asterisk indicates a statistically significant difference.
Figure 3State-by-state comparison of April 2020 telemedicine minutes per capita versus telemedicine per capita added during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic (measured as April through November 2020). Linear regression analysis shows a strong, positive association (m=4.18; R2=0.96) between states that had more telemedicine capacity in April and greater overall telemedicine expansion during COVID-19. Note: Vermont was excluded from this graph as it was an outlier at (4.66, 16.34).
Figure 4State-by-state comparison of telemedicine per capita added during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic (measured as April through November 2020) versus aggregate COVID-19 cases per capita through November 2020. Linear regression analysis shows a moderately negative relationship (m=–0.0031, R2=0.29), indicating that greater telemedicine expansion was somewhat associated with fewer aggregate COVID-19 cases per capita. Note: Vermont was excluded from this graph as it was an outlier at (19.61, 0.0067).
Figure 5Increase in telemedicine visits at the NIH Clinical Center between its initiation on April 15 and December 2020. Trends show that there was a steadily increasing number of monthly visits since its initiation, with November as the only month that did not have more visits than the previous one. In just 7 months, the program tallied more than 6000 total visits.