Mayo Clinic Proceedings: Digital Health (Mar 2024)
From 0-50 in Pandemic, and Then Back? A Case Study of Virtual Care in Ontario Pre–COVID-19, During, and Post–COVID-19
Abstract
We review the evolution of virtual care (VC) in Ontario. Pre–COVID-19, the primary focus was on patients in remote and underserved areas who went to host sites for care. Ontario’s vision pre-pandemic was for a gradual increase in VC by physicians registered with the Ontario Telemedicine Network (OTN), using OTN-approved video technologies; some accommodated patients and doctors wherever they were. Less than 1% of care was virtual pre-pandemic. We discuss how policies that altered access to in-person care (pandemic lockdowns and guidelines to seek and provide care virtually), compensation policy changes (allowing any Ontario physician to be compensated for VC), and policies allowing common technologies not previously allowed (including, importantly, the telephone), drove and enabled a rapid shift to >50% of care being virtual at the start of the pandemic, leveling off to ∼30% over time. We review policy changes in late 2022 and predict these will result in a drop in VC compared with the policies during the pandemic, particularly for walk-in clinic patients, in a province where 2.2-4.6 million people do not have a primary care doctor and presumably use walk-in clinics. This is because, going forward, physicians will be compensated less for telephone care than for in-person or video care for rostered patients, and because compensation will be less still for telephone or video care provided to walk-in patients. Through this case study we develop a visual model of how these key policy and technology factors influence the provision of VC.