A comprehensive report exhibits how in-person, telephone-, and video-based care has trended from 2020-2023 within the US Department of Veterans Affairs health care system.
The widespread adoption of telemedicine during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic has reshaped the landscape of health care delivery. A recent study conducted within the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) health care system sheds light on the evolving trends in clinical outpatient encounters from January 2019 to August 2023. The research found that telephone-based care has predominantly reverted to levels seen before the pandemic, and video-based care now plays a significant role in outpatient services, especially in mental health care.
The study, based on data from the VA's Corporate Data Warehouse and published recently in Annals of Internal Medicine, encompasses 277,348,286 clinical outpatient encounters involving approximately 9 million veterans, with 5.4 million utilizing VA outpatient health care services in 2019. The encounters were categorized by care service (primary care, mental health, subspecialty care) and modality (in-person, telephone, video).
“We observed dramatic expansions in the number of veterans who receive VA mental health care through video and phone appointments,” study author Jacqueline Ferguson, PhD, Center for Innovation to Implementation, Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System, wrote in an email to The American Journal of Managed Care®. “These telemedicine visits have the potential to offer veterans convenient access to care by reducing travel burdens and associated costs. This convenience is especially valuable in the case of mental health care because patients often have appointments as frequently as once a week.”
Key trends:
The study states this as the new equilibrium in which telephone-based care has largely returned to prepandemic levels, while video-based care constitutes a substantial portion of outpatient care. Mental health care continues to be a prominent user of telemedicine, with 55% provided through virtual platforms. Despite overall stability in telemedicine rates from May 2021, telephone visits have continued to decrease, and mental health video visits have shown an upward trend.
The findings of this VA study offer a comprehensive timeline of the shifts in health care delivery modalities since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. Although telemedicine rates have stabilized, it is essential to address disparities in access, particularly affecting older adults, individuals in rural regions, and historically marginalized groups, the researchers wrote. Future research should look into the quality, safety, and health outcomes of telemedicine in this emerging equilibrium, guiding both research and policy initiatives.
Reference
Ferguson J, Wray C, Van Campen J, Zulman DM. A new equilibrium for telemedicine: Prevalence of in-person, video-based, and telephone-based care in the Veterans Health Administration, 2019-2023. Ann Intern Med. Published online January 23, 2024. doi:10.7326/M23-2644
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