4.3 Article

Urban Telemedicine Enables Equity in Access to Acute Illness Care

Journal

TELEMEDICINE AND E-HEALTH
Volume 23, Issue 2, Pages 105-112

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/tmj.2016.0098

Keywords

pediatrics; telemedicine; telehealth; information management; healthcare access; equity

Funding

  1. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality [R18 HS01891, R01 HS15165]
  2. New York State Healthcare Foundation
  3. New York State Health Department-Health Care Efficiency and Affordability Law NY Phase 6-Primary Care Infrastructure (HEAL6)
  4. Maternal and Child Health Bureau [R40 MC03605]
  5. US Department of Commerce
  6. Rochester Area Community Foundation
  7. Daisy Marquis Jones Foundation
  8. United Way of Rochester and Monroe County
  9. Halcyon Hill Foundation
  10. Davenport-Hatch Foundation
  11. Rochester's Child
  12. Gannett Foundation
  13. Wilson Foundation
  14. Wilmott Foundation
  15. Weyer-haeuser Company Foundation
  16. Feinbloom Foundation
  17. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

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Background: Children with care for acute illness available through the Health-e-Access telemedicine model at childcare and schools were previously found to have 22% less emergency department (ED) use than counterparts without this service, but they also had 24% greater acute care use overall. Introduction: We assessed the hypothesis that increased utilization reflected improved access among impoverished inner-city children to a level experienced by more affluent suburban children. This observational study compared utilization among children without and with telemedicine access, beginning in 1993, ending in 2007, and based on 84,287 child-months of billing claims-based observation. Materials and Methods: Health-e-Access Telemedicine was initiated in stepwise manner over 187 study-months among 74 access sites (childcare, schools, community centers), beginning in month 105. Children dwelled in inner city, rest-of-city Rochester, NY, or in surrounding suburbs. Rate of total acute care visits (office, ED, telemedicine) was measured as visits per 100 child-years. Observed utilization rates were adjusted in multivariate analysis for age, sex, insurance type, and season of year. Results: When both suburban and inner-city children lacked telemedicine access, overall acute illness visits were 75% greater among suburban than inner-city children (suburban: inner-city rate ratio 1.75, p < 0.0001). After telemedicine became available to innercity children, their overall acute visits approximated those of suburban children (suburban: inner-city rate ratio 0.80, p = 0.07), whereas acute visits among suburban children remained at least (worst-case comparison) 56% greater than inner-city children without telemedicine (rate ratio 1.56, p < 0.0001). Discussion: At baseline, overall acute illness utilization of suburban children exceeded that of inner-city children. Overall utilization for inner-city children increased with telemedicine to that of suburban children at baseline. Without telemedicine, however, inner-city use remained substantially less than for suburban counterparts. Conclusions: Health-e-Access Telemedicine redressed socioeconomic disparities in acute care access in the Rochester area, thus contributing to a more equitable community.

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