JAMA: Analysis of Clinician and Patient Factors and Completion of Telemedicine Appointments Using Video – A new research article published by JAMA Network Open, examines the results of a quality improvement study of more than 130,000 scheduled video visits at an academic health system between March 1 and Dec. 31, 2020. Patient characteristics including older age and ethnicity are associated with the successful completion of video telemedicine visits, a new research article says.
The study generated several key data points.
- 90% of video visits were successful and 10% were converted to telephone visits
- Lower clinician comfort with technology was associated with conversion to telephone visits (odds ratio 0.15)
- Advanced patient age (66 to 80 years old) was associated with conversion to telephone visits (odds ratio 0.28)
- Lower patient socioeconomic status including low access to high-speed Internet was associated with conversion to telephone visits (odds ratio 0.85)
- Patient ethnic and racial minority status was associated with conversion to telephone visits (for Black and African American patients, the odds ratio was 0.75)
- Relatively high patient income ($75,001 to $213,000) was associated with successful video visits (odds ratio 1.18)
- Patient use of a tablet or laptop was associated with successful video visits (odds ratio 1.41)
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