Journal of Patient Experience (Mar 2024)

Patient Experiences With Telehealth During Versus After a System-Wide Telehealth Mandate During the COVID-19 Pandemic

  • Nicholas Hyman BS,
  • Maya Hamaker MPH,
  • Komal Lodaria MA,
  • Hannah B Jackson MD, MPH,
  • Kevin Chen MD, MHS,
  • Taylor B Sewell MD, MBA

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/23743735231216872
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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This study examines whether patients’ telehealth experiences differed during a health system mandate for telehealth encounters due to the COVID-19 pandemic versus after the mandate was relaxed. Patient experience surveys from telehealth visits across 17 adult (age 18+) primary care sites at a large, urban public health system were analyzed during two periods: when a mandate was active (March 1, 2020-June 30, 2020) and when the mandate was relaxed and any appointment modality was available (July 1, 2020-November 30, 2021). Primary outcomes were odds ratios (ORs) comparing top-box percentages of survey responses at multiple levels: individual questions, four domains, and all questions together as a composite. Key findings: Patients had higher odds of selecting top-box answers in the elective telehealth period for the Care Provider (1.09 [95% confidence interval 1.03, 1.16]) and General Assessment (1.13 [1.02, 1.24]) domains and the survey composite (1.08 [1.04, 1.13]), but there was no difference for individual questions. Women reported more positive experiences during the elective telehealth period in the Access (1.22 [1.01, 1.47]), Care Provider (1.32 [1.17, 1.50]), and Telemedicine Technology (1.24 [1.04, 1.50]) domains. Our findings suggest that patients had better telehealth experiences when mandates were relaxed.