PLoS ONE (Jan 2025)

Use of virtual care near the end of life before and during the COVID-19 pandemic: A population-based cohort study.

  • Kieran L Quinn,
  • Thérèse A Stukel,
  • Allan Detsky,
  • Hannah Chung,
  • Mohammed Rashidul Anwar,
  • Sacha Bhatia,
  • James Downar,
  • Vivian Hung,
  • Sarina Isenberg,
  • Allison Kurahashi,
  • Douglas S Lee,
  • Nathan Stall,
  • Peter Tanuseputro,
  • Chaim M Bell

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0313766
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
p. e0313766

Abstract

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Background and aimsThe expanded use of virtual care may worsen pre-existing disparities in use and delivery of end-of-life care among certain groups of people. We measured the use of virtual care in the last three months of life before and after the introduction of virtual care fee codes that funded care delivery at the start of COVID-19 on March 14, 2020, and identified changes in the characteristics of people using it.MethodsWe used linked clinical and administrative datasets to study use of virtual care in the last three months of life among 411,564 adults who died between January 25, 2018, and November 30, 2022. Modified Poisson regression was used to measure the association of the use of virtual care in the last three months of life with the pandemic study period and its association with each person- and physician-level factor.Results14,261 people (8%) used virtual care in the last three months of life before the pandemic, and 161,000 people (69%) used it during the pandemic (relative risk [RR] 8.76; 95% CI 8.48-9.05). Several individual patient characteristics were associated with statistically significant increases in the use of virtual care after March 14, 2020 (following the introduction of virtual care fee codes), compared to before such as among older adults, ethnic minorities, multiple chronic comorbid health conditions and higher frailty groups.ConclusionsThe introduction of new fee codes broadening technology and funding for end-of-life care at the start of pandemic combined with pandemic-related effects was associated with a substantial increase in the use of virtual care near the end of life among certain groups and a general leveling of pre-existing disparities in its use. Virtual end-of-life care delivery may strengthen person-centredness for individuals with limited ability to attend in-person appointments and by providers who may not have previously engaged in such care.