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Assessing the Impact of Telemedicine Implementation in Diverse Health Care Systems.

Hector P Rodriguez
Published in: Medical care (2023)
Health care organizations and systems can have a large impact on how extensively telemedicine and virtual visits are used by medical practices and individual clinicians. This supplemental issue of medical care aims to advance evidence about how health care organizations and systems can best support telemedicine and virtual visit implementation. This issue includes 10 empirical studies examining the impact of telemedicine on quality of care, utilization, and/or patient care experiences, of which 6 are studies of Kaiser Permanente patients; 3 are studies of Medicaid, Medicare, and community health center patients; and 1 is a study of PCORnet primary care practices. The Kaiser Permanente studies find that ancillary service orders resulting from telemedicine encounters were not placed as often as in-person encounters for urinary tract infections, neck, and back pain, but there were no significant changes in patient fulfillment of ordered antidepressant medications. Studies focused on diabetes care quality among community health center patients and Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries highlight that telemedicine helped maintain continuity of primary care and diabetes care quality during the COVID-19 pandemic. The research findings collectively demonstrate high variation in telemedicine implementation across systems and the important role that telemedicine had in maintaining the quality of care and utilization for adults with chronic conditions when in-person care was less accessible.
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