BMC Health Services Research (Feb 2022)

Outpatient visit trends for internal medicine ambulatory care sensitive conditions after the COVID-19 pandemic: a time-series analysis

  • Ciara Pendrith,
  • Dhruv Nayyar,
  • Cherry Chu,
  • Tara O’Brien,
  • Owen D. Lyons,
  • Payal Agarwal,
  • Danielle Martin,
  • R. Sacha Bhatia,
  • Geetha Mukerji

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-022-07566-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background The COVID-19 pandemic led to a dramatic shift in the delivery of outpatient medicine with reduced in-person visits and a transition to predominantly virtual visits. We sought to understand trends in visit patterns for ambulatory care sensitive conditions (ACSCs) commonly seen in internal medicine clinics. Methods We included adult outpatients seen for an ACSC between March 15th, 2017 and March 14th, 2021 at a single-centre in Ontario, Canada. Monthly visits were assessed by visit type (new consultation, follow-up), diagnosis, and clinic. Time series analyses compared visit volumes pre- and post-pandemic. Proportion of virtual visits were compared before and during the pandemic. Patient and visit factors were compared between in-person and virtual visits. Results 8274 patients with 34,021 visits were included. Monthly visits increased by 15% during the pandemic (p 95% of diabetes visits were virtual. Conclusions We found a significant increase in overall visits to internal medicine clinics driven by increased volumes of follow-up visits, which more than offset decreased new consultations. There was variability in visit trends and uptake of virtual care by visit diagnosis, which may indicate challenges with delivery of virtual care for certain conditions.

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