1. Telehealth: Improving Access to and Quality of Pediatric Health Care
- Author
-
S. David McSwain, Jesse Hackell, Neil E. Herendeen, Harold K. Simon, William B. Moskowitz, Chelsea E F Bodnar, Alison Curfman, Joshua Alexander, and James P. Marcin
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Pediatric health ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Child Health Services ,MEDLINE ,Ethnic group ,Telehealth ,Article ,Health Services Accessibility ,Health care ,medicine ,Ethnicity ,Humans ,Quality (business) ,Pediatricians ,Quality of care ,Location ,Child ,media_common ,Quality of Health Care ,business.industry ,Telemedicine ,United States ,Race Factors ,Family medicine ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,business ,Specialization - Abstract
All children and adolescents deserve access to quality health care regardless of their race/ethnicity, health conditions, financial resources, or geographic location. Despite improvements over the past decades, severe disparities in the availability and access to high-quality health care for children and adolescents continue to exist throughout the United States. Economic and racial factors, geographic maldistribution of primary care pediatricians, and limited availability of pediatric medical subspecialists and pediatric surgical specialists all contribute to inequitable access to pediatric care. Robust, comprehensive telehealth coverage is critical to improving pediatric access and quality of care and services, particularly for under-resourced populations.
- Published
- 2021