| Literature DB >> 35313453 |
Sarah T Price1, Arch G Mainous2,3, Benjamin J Rooks3.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic resulted in rapid implementation of telehealth within primary care impacting cancer screening. We sought to assess the impact of increased telehealth use on physician recommendation for cancer screenings during the COVID-19 pandemic in North America. Primary care physicians (n = 757) were surveyed in Fall 2020 through the Council of Academic Family Medicine's Educational Research Alliance (CERA) general membership survey. Respondents were asked about cancer screening practices and telehealth services during the COVID-19 pandemic. Chi-squared tests were performed to assess relationships between cancer screening practices and changes in care necessitated by the shift to telehealth services. Associations between participant responses and those reporting a diminished patient-provider relationship were assessed with multivariable logistic regression. A substantial proportion of respondents reported postponing screening for breast (34.5%), colon (32.9%), and cervical cancer (31%), and a majority (51.1%) agreed changes in care seeking will lead to increased incidence of late stage cancer. Physicians reported high use of telehealth during the pandemic, but endorsed limitations in its use to maintain cancer screening practices and the patient-provider relationship. Physicians who reported patients were afraid to come into the office were more likely to report an impaired patient-provider relationship (OR = 2.77, 95% CI: 1.33 - 7.87). Physicians who reported that telehealth maintains their patient-provider relationship were less likely to report an impaired patient-provider relationship (OR = 0.33, 95% CI: 0.17 - 0.67). As telehealth becomes increasingly prominent, evaluation of the impact of telehealth on cancer screening and patient-provider relationships will be increasingly important for primary care.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer prevention; Cancer screening; Covid-19; Telemedicine
Year: 2022 PMID: 35313453 PMCID: PMC8928753 DOI: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2022.101769
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prev Med Rep ISSN: 2211-3355
Impact of COVID-19 on cancer screening practices.
| Breast % (n) | Colon % (n) | Cervical % (n) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Delaying screening until there is reduced public health risk | 9.0 (68) | 9.5 (72) | 8.6 (65) |
| I had previously been postponing screening but have now resumed my usual screening practices | 34.5 (261) | 32.9 (249) | 31.0 (235) |
| Initiating screening at a later age | 0 | 0 | 0.26 (2) |
| Recommending screening at a longer time interval | 1.6 (12) | 1.2 (9) | 0.9 (7) |
| Recommending changes in screening only for individuals at high risk | 3.2. (24) | 3.4 (26) | 2.4 (18) |
| I have not changed my screening recommendations | 45.6 (345) | 47.3 (358) | 51.3 (388) |
Attitudes toward delivery of care during the pandemic.
| % (n) | |
|---|---|
| Strongly disagree | 3.5 (27) |
| Disagree | 29.6 (224) |
| Neutral | 30.9 (234) |
| Agree | 27.2 (206) |
| Strongly agree | 3.2 (24) |
| Strongly disagree | 1.3 (10) |
| Disagree | 15.9 (120) |
| Neutral | 26.7 (202) |
| Agree | 45.4 (344) |
| Strongly agree | 5.7 (43) |
| Strongly disagree | 2.4 (18) |
| Disagree | 17.0 (129) |
| Neutral | 24.3 (184) |
| Agree | 44.4 (336) |
| Strongly agree | 8.1 (61) |
| Strongly disagree | 14.0 (106) |
| Disagree | 41.6 (315) |
| Neutral | 24.6 (186) |
| Agree | 14.5 (110) |
| Strongly agree | 2.6 (20) |
| Strongly disagree | 1.5 (12) |
| Disagree | 17.0 (129) |
| Neutral | 15.9 (120) |
| Agree | 50.5 (382) |
| Strongly agree | 11.5 (87) |
| Strongly disagree | 11.6 (88) |
| Disagree | 33.0 (250) |
| Neutral | 29.6 (224) |
| Agree | 20.2 (153) |
| Strongly agree | 2.6 (20) |
Demographic information on survey respondents.
| n = 757 | Average (stdev) |
|---|---|
| 47.9 (11.2) | |
| % (n) | |
| Female | 61.0 (462) |
| Male | 36.9 (279) |
| Other | 0.4 (3) |
| Choose not to Disclose | 0.9 (7) |
| Hispanic/Latino | 5.0 (38) |
| Non-Hispanic/Latino | 93.5 (708) |
| American Indian or Alaska Native | 0.4 (3) |
| Asian | 7.6 (58) |
| Black or African-American | 3.4 (26) |
| Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander | 0.3 (2) |
| White | 83.8 (634) |
| Choose not to Disclose | 4.1 (31) |
| Less than 30,000 | 5.5 (42) |
| 30,000 to 75,000 | 11.4 (86) |
| 75,001 to 150,000 | 17.2 (130) |
| 150,001 to 500,000 | 26.9 (204) |
| 500,001 to 1 million | 13.7 (104) |
| More than 1 million | 24.8 (188) |
| Telehealth visits | 15 (114) |
| In clinic visit | 46.8 (355) |
| 50:50 telehealth and in clinic visits | 37.2 (282) |
| I am not using telehealth | 4.6 (35) |
| I provide telehealth via telephone or other voice only platform | 18.0 (136) |
| I provide telehealth visits with audio and video | 77.4 (586) |
| 0–25% | 17.3 (131) |
| 26–50% | 22.3 (169) |
| 51–75% | 27.7 (210) |
| 76–100% | 10.2 (77) |
Multivariate analysis on factors associated with the patient-provider relationship and care seeking behaviors.
| OR (95% CI) | |
|---|---|
| Adjusted odds ratios for associations with clinicians who feel that their relationship with their patients suffered | |
| n | 377 |
| Percent of Patients with Video Capability (25% increments) | 0.77 (0.31, 1.17) * |
| Observed No Differences in Care Seeking between Minority/White Patients | 0.80 (0.35, 2.00) * |
| Patients Afraid to Come to Office | 2.77 (1.33, 7.87) * |
| Believe Telehealth Maintains Patient-Provider Relationship | 0.33 (0.17, 0.67) * |
| Increased Time Spent on Administrative Tasks | 1.02 (0.99, 1.05) * |
| Larger Community | 0.94 (0.74, 1.14) * |
| Adjusted odds ratios for associations with clinicians who observed no differences in care seeking between minority and white patients | |
| n | 324 |
| Patients Afraid to Come to Office | 0.38 (0.21, 0.65) ‡ |
| Increased Time Spent on Research Tasks | 1.07 (1.01, 1.14) ‡ |
| Increased Time Spent on Administrative Tasks | 0.98 (0.95, 1.03) ‡ |
| Larger Community | 0.80 (0.66, 0.96) ‡0.80 (0.66, 0.96) |
*Adjusted for respondent age/race/ethnicity/gender, access to high speed internet, and time spent on research tasks.
‡Adjusted for respondent age/race/ethnicity/gender, and access to high speed internet.