Health Care Usage During the COVID-19 Pandemic and the Adoption of Telemedicine: Retrospective Study of Chronic Disease Cohorts

Oct 3, 2024Journal of medical Internet research

Health Care Use and Telemedicine Adoption During COVID-19 in People with Long-Term Illnesses

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Abstract

In-person health care usage decreased by 10% to 24% across various disease cohorts during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic.

  • Telehealth appointments compensated for the reduction in in-person visits for most diseases studied.
  • For anxiety and depression, the increase in telehealth usage was greater than the decline in in-person visits, by up to 5%.
  • Younger patients and men exhibited higher rates of telehealth usage after adjusting for other factors.
  • Patients living in areas with a higher Social Vulnerability Index (SVI) were less likely to use telehealth services.
  • When patients from high SVI areas did use telehealth, they had a higher number of telehealth visits compared to others.

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