Association between virtual primary care and emergency depar

Association between virtual primary care and emergency department use during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic in Ontario, Canada

Background: Uptake of virtual care increased substantially during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether a shift from in-person to virtual visits by primary care physicians was associated with increased use of emergency departments among their enrolled patients.

Methods: We conducted an observational study of monthly virtual visits and emergency department visits from Apr. 1, 2020, to Mar. 31, 2021, using administrative data from Ontario, Canada. We used multivariable regression analysis to estimate the association between the proportion of a physician’s visits that were delivered virtually and the number of emergency department visits among their enrolled patients.

Results: The proportion of virtual visits was higher among female, younger and urban physicians, and the number of emergency department visits was lower among patients of female and urban physicians. In an unadjusted analysis, a 1% increase in a physician’s proportion of virtual visits was found to be associated with 11.0 (95% confidence interval [CI] 10.1–11.8) fewer emergency department visits per 1000 rostered patients. After controlling for covariates, we observed no statistically significant change in emergency department visits per 1% increase in the proportion of virtual visits (0.2, 95% CI −0.5 to 0.9).

Interpretation: We did not find evidence that patients substituted emergency department visits in the context of decreased availability of in-person care with their family physician during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. Future research should focus on the long-term impact of virtual care on access and quality of patient care.

Related Keywords

United States , Canada , United Kingdom , Canadian , Steve Nastos , James Wright , Taylor Lougheed , Jasmin Kantarevic , Shaun Shaikh , Nikolina Mizdrak , Patrick Conlon , Paul Tenenbein , Hemant Shah , Emergency Department , National Ambulatory Care Reporting System , Ontario Ministry Of Health , Client Agency Enrolment Program , Ontario Medical Association , Ontario Telemedicine Network , Srx Health , United Kingdom National Institute For Health Research , Ontario Health Insurance Plan , Canadian Institute For Health Information , Canadian Institutes Of Health Research , Canadian Institute For Health , Canadian Association For The Study Of Liver , United States National Institute For Health , Canadian Medical Protective Association , Ontario Health Insurance , Corporate Provider Database , Canadian Institute , Population Grouping Methodology , Statistics Canada , Rurality Index , Canadian Triage , Acuity Scale , Ontario Ministry , Nadine Chami , Sharada Weir , Canadian Association , Canadian Institutes , Health Research , United States National Institute , United Kingdom National Institute , Canadian Medical Protective , Health Information , Long Term Care , Open Access , Creative Commons Attribution ,

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