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10.1089/tmj.2020.0562

http://scihub22266oqcxt.onion/10.1089/tmj.2020.0562
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33999718!ä!33999718

suck abstract from ncbi


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pmid33999718      Telemed+J+E+Health 2022 ; 28 (1): 3-10
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  • Rapid Rise of Pediatric Telehealth During COVID-19 in a Large Multispecialty Health System #MMPMID33999718
  • Howie F; Kreofsky BL; Ravi A; Lokken T; Hoff MD; Fang JL
  • Telemed J E Health 2022[Jan]; 28 (1): 3-10 PMID33999718show ga
  • Background:Before the COVID-19 pandemic, telemedicine use for outpatient pediatric specialty care was low. Stay-at-home orders (SHO) prompted rapid upscaling of telemedicine capabilities and upskilling of providers. This study compares telemedicine usage before and after the SHO and analyzes how a Children's Center addressed challenges associated with a rapid rise in telemedicine.Methods:Data on outpatient visits across 14 specialty divisions were abstracted from the institutional electronic medical record. The 12-week study period (March 9, 2020-May 29, 2020) spanned three epochs: pre-SHO; post-SHO; reopening to in-person visits. Changes in in-person visits, video visits, and completed, cancelled, and no-show appointments were compared between three epochs.Results:A total of 4,914 outpatient pediatric specialty visits were completed, including 67% (3,296/4,914) in-person and 33% (1,618/4,914) through video. During the first two epochs encompassing the SHO, video visits increased by 4,750%. During the third epoch when the SHO was lifted, video visits decreased by 66%, with 19.4% of visits conducted through video in week 12. Overall, for outpatient video appointments, 82.8% (1,618/1,954) were completed, 9.1% (178/1,954) were cancelled, and 8.1% (158/1,954) were no-shows. The percentage of completed and no-show appointments did not differ between epochs. However, the cancellation rate decreased significantly from Epochs 1 to 3 (p = 0.008).Conclusion:A SHO was associated with a large increase in pediatric specialty video visits. Post-SHO, the percentage of pediatric specialty visits conducted through video decreased but remained higher than before the SHO. Frequent, content-rich communications, self-directed tutorials, and individualized coaching may facilitate successful increases in telemedicine use.
  • |*COVID-19[MESH]
  • |*Telemedicine[MESH]
  • |Child[MESH]
  • |Humans[MESH]
  • |Outpatients[MESH]
  • |Pandemics[MESH]


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