We know that telehealth can be a tremendous opportunity to expand healthcare access for people who might face barriers to medical services. But it also may be replicating the digital divide.
In a recent study, researchers examined data from nearly 150,000 unique patients who scheduled telemedicine visits from March 16 to May 11, 2020. They investigated who completed those visits, and how.
Two of those researchers, Dr. Lauren Eberly, a fellow in cardiovascular medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, and Dr. Srinath Adusumalli, assistant chief medical information officer for connected health and assistant professor of clinical medicine, cardiovascular, at Penn Medicine, joined MobiHealthNews Managing Editor Laura Lovett and Healthcare IT News Senior Editor Kat Jercich to discuss their findings and the importance of centering equity in virtual care.
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Talking points:
More about this episode:
Women are less likely to use video for telehealth care
Study: Black patients more likely than white patients to use telehealth because of pandemic
Telehealth may worsen digital divide for people with disabilities
Telehealth's digital divide is real, and members of Congress want to address it
Hims & Hers, ATA, and 10 others launch Telehealth Equity Coalition