Abstract
Introduction
The need to rapidly implement telehealth at large scale during the COVID-19 pandemic led to many patients using telehealth for the first time. We assessed the effect of structured pre-visit preparatory telephone calls on success of telehealth visits and examined risk factors for unsuccessful visits.
Methods
A retrospective cohort study was carried out of 45,803 adult patients scheduled for a total of 64,447 telehealth appointments between March and July 2020 at an academic medical center. A subset of patients received a structured pre-visit phone call. Demographic factors and inclusion of a pre-visit call were analysed by logistic regression. Primary outcomes were non-completion of any visit and completion of phone-only versus audio-visual telehealth visits.
Results
A pre-visit telephone call to a subset of patients significantly increased the likelihood of a successful telehealth visit (OR 0.54; 95% CI: 0.48–0.60). Patients aged 18–30 years, those with non-commercial insurance or those of Black race were more likely to have incomplete visits. Compared to age 18–30, increasing age increased likelihood of a failed video visit: 31–50 years (OR 1.31; 95% CI: 1.13–1.51), 51–70 years (OR 2.98; 2.60–3.42) and >70 years (OR 4.16; 3.58–4.82). Those with non-commercial insurance and those of Black race (OR 1.8; 95% CI 1.67–1.92) were more likely to have a failed video visit.
Discussion
A structured pre-call to patients improved the likelihood of a successful video visit during widespread adoption of telehealth. Structured pre-calls to patients may be an important tool to help reduce gaps in utilization among groups.
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References
Supplementary Material
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