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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 5/2022

01-04-2022 | Care | Original Research

The Impact of Telemedicine on Quality of Care for Patients with Diabetes After March 2020

Authors: Jacob K. Quinton, MD, MSHS, Michael K Ong, MD, PhD, Catherine Sarkisian, MD, MSHS, Alejandra Casillas, MD, MSHS, Sitaram Vangala, MS, Preeti Kakani, BS, Maria Han, MD, MSHS

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 5/2022

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Abstract

Background

The impact of telemedicine on ambulatory care quality is a key question for policymakers as they navigate payment reform for remote care.

Objective

To evaluate whether utilizing telemedicine in the first 9 months of the COVID-19 pandemic impacted performance on a diabetes quality of care measure for patients at a large academic medical center. We hypothesized care quality would reduce less among telemedicine users.

Design

Quasi-experimental design using binomial logistic regression. Covariates included age, gender, race, ethnicity, type of insurance, hierarchical condition category score, primary language at the individual level, and zip code–level income.

Participants

All adult patients younger than 75 years of age diagnosed with type 2 diabetes mellitus (N = 16,588) as of 3/19/2020 at a single academic health center.

Interventions

Completion of one or more telemedicine encounters with an institutional primary care physician or endocrinologist between 3/19/2020 and 12/19/2020.

Main Measures

The components met in a five-item composite measure of diabetes quality of care, as of patients’ last clinical encounter. Items were (1) systolic blood pressure less than 140 mmHg, (2) hemoglobin A1c less than 8.0%, (3) using a statin and (4) aspirin, and (5) tobacco non-use.

Key Results

From the pre- to post-period, the probability of meeting any given component of the composite measure for patients only utilizing in-person care was 21% lower (OR, 95% CI 0.79; 0.76, 0.81) and for the telemedicine users 2% lower (OR 0.98; 0.85, 1.13). There was an increased likelihood of meeting any given component among telemedicine users compared to in-person care alone (OR 1.25; 1.08, 1.44).

Conclusions

Patients with diabetes utilizing telemedicine performed similarly on a composite measure of diabetes care quality compared to before the pandemic. Those not utilizing telemedicine had reductions. Telemedicine use maintained quality of care for patients with diabetes during the first 9 months of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Metadata
Title
The Impact of Telemedicine on Quality of Care for Patients with Diabetes After March 2020
Authors
Jacob K. Quinton, MD, MSHS
Michael K Ong, MD, PhD
Catherine Sarkisian, MD, MSHS
Alejandra Casillas, MD, MSHS
Sitaram Vangala, MS
Preeti Kakani, BS
Maria Han, MD, MSHS
Publication date
01-04-2022
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Keywords
Care
Telemedicine
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 5/2022
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-021-07367-3

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