Why Telemedicine Is Good Medicine
Lloyd Minor
Carl and Elizabeth Naumann Dean, Stanford University School of Medicine
It’s hard to believe now, but before 2020, it was uncommon for a patient to interact with their physician in any way other than in-person, face-to-face. Less than 3% of people enrolled in large employer-based health plans and less than 1% of those enrolled in traditional Medicare had ever?used ?telehealth. Of course, the technology existed for video and telephone visits back then. But how the technology could be used, and what government payers and private insurers would reimburse, was limited to a small subset of clinical interactions. This was, in part, by the design of strict federal and state-based rules governing the use of telemedicine.??
But when the pandemic hit, the landscape changed. Under the national public health emergency declaration, many telehealth restrictions in the U.S. were temporarily lifted, and medical centers around the country quickly responded. The use of telemedicine skyrocketed to meet burgeoning patient demand for care. For example, before the pandemic, about 13,000 Medicare beneficiaries?received ?telemedicine services in a week. In the last week of April 2020, that number had shot up to nearly 1.7 million.??
Telemedicine use has settled since that spike, but all told, the past three years represent one of the most significant expansions of digital health in U.S. history. And though we’ve only just begun studying the results, what we see so far looks promising.
Patients are engaged.
Even as COVID-19 restrictions relaxed, patients have continued to choose virtual visit options. In a 2021?survey ?from the U.S. Census Bureau, nearly one in four respondents said they’d used telehealth services within the past month. Importantly, patients also report that they are pleased with their experiences —?with satisfaction rates as high as 86% — and are increasingly?willing ?to use these platforms to receive their care. In particular, patients have?cited ?time saved, improved access, and increased convenience as advantages of telemedicine. They also report positive experiences?communicating ?with their health care providers on these platforms.
Telemedicine is helping patients be healthier.
An obvious drawback to telehealth is that clinicians cannot conduct a physical exam when interacting with patients from a distance. However, video visits and other virtual care options have proven to be effective tools for follow-up visits, medication adjustments, and monitoring chronic conditions. Studies show that patients who used telemedicine in addition to their in-person care experienced better outcomes than those who didn’t. For example, a?study ?of primary care patients who had only in-person visits, compared to those who had both in-person and telehealth visits, found that patients in the second group were more likely to get their recommended screenings and tests. In another?study ?of the first nine months of the pandemic, diabetic patients who participated in at least one telehealth interaction were more likely than those who didn’t use telemedicine to maintain their pre-pandemic levels of health instead of worsening.?
Telehealth can help us reach more patients.
These touch points with a clinician — however brief — can make a big difference to a patient’s health. But our health care delivery model has come to rely too much on patients traveling to clinics and hospitals, rather than bringing care to them in their communities. Telemedicine offers an efficient way to reach patients where they live —?and for people in rural areas, where hospitals are unfortunately closing their doors at a rapid rate, bridging these miles can mean the difference between seeing a doctor and delaying much-needed care.?
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That’s not to say the work is done. Video visits and other virtual care require access to devices, technology, and digital know-how that people in disadvantaged groups don’t always have. In building a telehealth infrastructure, we must find ways to advance equitable access and ensure our most vulnerable aren’t left behind. Fortunately, there are already promising signs. The Census Bureau?survey ?found that the highest rates of telehealth use were among people with low incomes and Black adults — traditionally underserved populations — because these individuals were more likely to participate in visits via telephone. What’s more, when polled before the pandemic and after, Black adults were among the subgroups that reported the greatest increase in willingness to use a video visit.
Continuing the forward momentum of telehealth
We still have a lot to learn about how to best leverage these platforms, but we’ve come a long way in the past three years. Much of this progress is due to the suspension of decades-old parameters regulating how telemedicine is practiced. With states and the federal government poised to rescind their pandemic-related emergency declarations, many of those restrictions could again take effect — and in some states, they already have. It is my hope that, instead of reverting to our pre-pandemic status, we will use our current position as a starting point for telemedicine in the U.S., and we will continue to apply what we’ve learned to refine this delivery model to benefit even more patients.
These resources provide more information about the current state of telehealth in the U.S. and clinicians’ experience using these platforms for patient care.
Biden Administration Seeks to Expand Telehealth in Rural America ?(The New York Times). Last fall, the Department of Health and Human Services announced a plan to distribute nearly $20 million to rural and underserved communities to bolster telehealth services where some of the nation’s oldest and sickest patients live.?
Telemedicine works. But states are killing it off ?(NBC News). This opinion piece provides an overview of how state and federal COVID-19 public health emergency declarations enabled officials to temporarily waive restrictions related to telemedicine, and how the expiration of these declarations has meant that restrictions have been reinstated in many states.
Therapy for People Who Can’t Go to Therapy ?(The New York Times). This guest essay discusses the importance of equity considerations in expanding access to mental health care through telehealth services.?
Serving Patients Through a Screen ?(The Atlantic). In this opinion piece, a physician discusses her conversion from telemedicine skeptic to advocate after seeing how virtual visits can enhance the doctor-patient connection and increase patients’ engagement and comfort.
Communication Liaison
1 年Telehealth should be an ABSOLUTE last resort. Healthcare is a HANDS-ON industry. You cannot make a true diagnoses for a sick or injured patient over a video chat so please stop acting like you can. All you can do is chat, charge, and recommend they come in, which becomes more costly to the patient. And before anybody starts barking at me, yes, I do know what I am talking about. I was the patient AND someone who both, volunteered and worked, in the middle of healthcare for the entire "pandemic." My message to the public: STOP allowing the healthcare industry to dictate what can and can't be done for you. YOU are the patient and the medical professionals are here to serve YOU, in person. You have the right to be seen in person and don't let ANYBODY tell you otherwise. Also, stop allowing health insurance companies to dictate what you can and can't have done to help you heal. If your insurance company won't help you, find a good doctor who takes cash and ask them to cut the cost if you pay up front. Many already do this. There are plenty of medical providers who are sick and tired of the insurance companies and they would rather take cash so they can do what they went to school to do, which is to help patients get better.
In retrospect, when Medicare and insurance companies began reimbursing patients for telemedicine, this was a contributing adoption factor to the growing popularity of telemedicine because patients have the same amount of out-of-pocket expenses to pay for when choosing between a brick-and-mortar or virtual doctor’s office visit. Historically, patients were accustomed beforehand to paying the full cost of telemedicine out-of-pocket before insurers’ reimbursement authorization. Thank you for sharing the availability of this resourceful newsletter publication. #telemedicine #virtualcare
Director & Co-Founder @ DigitalMonozukuri.net
1 年I was wondering if there will be a serious reduction of cost in healthcare using digital health tools..
Medical Doctor and Researcher(especially in Atherosclerosis and Vascular events)
1 年Telemedicine can change the ordinary way to interact with patients and maybe it’s helpful from many aspects.
Engineer, AI, IoT, digital transformation, strategy, business models, healthcare innovation, preparedness, researcher, author
1 年This is an informative and insightful piece. Good medicine should not be confused, however, with the means of delivering it. Most patients, for example, have little idea of how much good doctors gain from seeing their patients in person, so the tradeoffs are lost to them. As a result, access, convenience, and costs become the primary drivers. These are also the primary drivers of commoditization, something I've been involved with for decades. Commoditization is particularly attractive when there is a shortage of talent because it helps organizations deliver services more predictably and less expensively. In the process, quality becomes quantified as are key human resources, i.e., doctors, nurses, and related clinicians. This is not an argument against telemedicine, but history shows that those enamored with emerging technological innovations often find themselves and their work disrupted in ways they didn't expect. As an informed patient with deep connections to doctor friends, I'm happy to sacrifice convenience and put up with access issues to benefit from face-to-face interactions with my physician - on most issues. Telemedicine is a great alternative for dealing with routine issues like a bad cold.