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Disconnected: a survey of users and nonusers of telehealth and their use of primary care

Authors :
Anuradha Jetty
Megan Coffman
Stephen Petterson
Aliza Gordon
Miranda A Moore
Andrew Bazemore
Judith J. Stephenson
Winston Liaw
Wallace C Adamson
Gayathri Sridhar
Source :
J Am Med Inform Assoc
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Objective The study sought to assess awareness, perceptions, and value of telehealth in primary care from the perspective of patients. Materials and Methods We conducted a cross-sectional, Web-based survey of adults with access to telehealth services who visited healthcare providers for any of the 20 most-commonly seen diagnoses during telehealth visits. Three groups were studied: registered users (RUs) of telehealth had completed a LiveHealth Online (a health plan telehealth service provider) visit, registered nonusers (RNUs) registered for LiveHealth Online but had not conducted a visit, and nonregistered nonusers (NRNUs) completed neither step. Results Of 32 831 patients invited, 3219 (9.8%) responded and 766 met eligibility criteria and completed surveys: 390 (51%) RUs, 117 (15%) RNUs, and 259 (34%) NRNUs. RUs were least likely to have a primary care usual source of care (65.6% vs 78.6% for RNUs vs 80.0% for NRNUs; P Conclusions Telehealth users reported that they relied on live video for enhanced access and were less connected to primary care than nonusers were. Telehealth may expand service access but risks further fragmentation of care and undermining of the primary care function absent better coordination and information sharing with usual sources of patients’ care.

Details

ISSN :
1527974X
Volume :
26
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association : JAMIA
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....39905300b4bfd5a75fe42f342656ebab