Rapid Transition to Telehealth and the Digital Divide: Implications for Primary Care Access and Equity in a Post‐COVID Era

Jun 2, 2021The Milbank quarterly

Fast Shift to Telehealth and Its Impact on Fair Access to Primary Care After COVID-19

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Abstract

Providers in high-socioeconomic vulnerability areas were almost twice as likely to use telephones as their primary telehealth modality compared to those in low-socioeconomic vulnerability areas (41.7% vs 23.8%).

  • Higher use of telephone as the primary telehealth method in high-socioeconomic vulnerability areas is associated with increased patient-related barriers.
  • Video was the primary telehealth modality for 33.7% of providers in low-socioeconomic vulnerability areas, compared to only 18.7% in high-socioeconomic vulnerability areas.
  • The transition to telehealth revealed disparities in both the mode of delivery and types of barriers experienced by providers based on community characteristics.
  • Overall, telehealth became a prominent care delivery method in New York City during the COVID-19 pandemic, but the adoption was uneven across different communities.

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