Patient Preferences for Direct-to-Consumer Telemedicine Services: Replication and Extension of a Nationwide Survey.

IF 2.6 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES JMIR Human Factors Pub Date : 2024-11-27 DOI:10.2196/51056
Julia Ivanova, Hattie Wilczewski, Farina Klocksieben, Mollie Cummins, Hiral Soni, Triton Ong, Janelle Barrera, Jillian Harvey, Nathaniel O'Connell, James McElligott, Brandon Welch, Brian Bunnell
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Abstract

Background: A 2017 survey of patient perspectives showed overall willingness and comfort to use telemedicine, but low actual use. Given recent growth and widespread exposure of patients to telemedicine, patient preferences are likely to have changed.

Objective: This study aimed to (1) identify demographic trends in patient preferences and experiences; (2) measure ease of use and satisfaction of telemedicine; and (3) measure changes in telemedicine use, willingness, and comfort since 2017.

Methods: We replicated a 2017 study with a nationwide survey of US adults. The survey, an extended version of the previous study, measured patient health care access as well as knowledge, experiences, and preferences regarding telemedicine encounters. We recruited participants using SurveyMonkey Audience in July 2022. We used descriptive statistics and generalized estimating equations to measure change and identify trends.

Results: We accrued 4577 complete responses. Patient experience with telemedicine was substantially higher in 2022 than in 2017, with 61.1% (vs 5.3%) of participants aware that their primary care provider offered telemedicine and 34.5% (vs 3.5%) reporting use of telemedicine with their primary care provider. This study also reported ease of use and satisfaction rates to be similar to in-person visits, while overall willingness and comfort in using telemedicine increased from 2017. Individuals at the poverty line were significantly less likely to report satisfaction with telemedicine visits. We found increased interpersonal distance in a patient and health care professional relationship significantly reduced patient ease of use, willingness, and comfort in using telemedicine.

Conclusions: This study identified an association between income and patient satisfaction, conveying the importance of understanding telemedicine in relation to health care access and equity. Telemedicine ease of use and satisfaction were comparable to in-person visits. Individuals reported greater use and higher positive perceptions of telemedicine willingness and comfort since 2017.

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患者对直接面向消费者的远程医疗服务的偏好:全国性调查的复制和扩展。
背景:2017 年的一项患者观点调查显示,患者总体上愿意并乐于使用远程医疗,但实际使用率较低。鉴于远程医疗最近的发展和患者对远程医疗的广泛接触,患者的偏好很可能已经发生变化:本研究旨在:(1)确定患者偏好和体验的人口趋势;(2)测量远程医疗的易用性和满意度;(3)测量自 2017 年以来远程医疗使用、意愿和舒适度的变化:我们复制了 2017 年的一项研究,对美国成年人进行了一次全国范围的调查。该调查是之前研究的扩展版,测量了患者获得医疗保健的情况以及有关远程医疗的知识、经验和偏好。我们于 2022 年 7 月使用 SurveyMonkey Audience 招募参与者。我们使用描述性统计和广义估计方程来衡量变化并确定趋势:我们收集了 4577 份完整的回复。2022 年患者对远程医疗的体验大大高于 2017 年,61.1%(vs 5.3%)的参与者知道其初级保健提供者提供远程医疗,34.5%(vs 3.5%)的参与者报告其初级保健提供者使用了远程医疗。这项研究还报告称,远程医疗的易用性和满意度与面对面就诊相似,而使用远程医疗的总体意愿和舒适度比 2017 年有所提高。处于贫困线以下的个人对远程医疗就诊的满意度明显较低。我们发现,患者与医疗保健专业人员关系中人际距离的增加大大降低了患者使用远程医疗的易用性、意愿和舒适度:本研究发现了收入与患者满意度之间的关系,这表明了解远程医疗与医疗保健的可及性和公平性之间的关系非常重要。远程医疗的易用性和满意度与面对面就诊相当。据个人报告,自2017年以来,他们更多地使用远程医疗,并对远程医疗的意愿和舒适度有更高的积极看法。
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来源期刊
JMIR Human Factors
JMIR Human Factors Medicine-Health Informatics
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
3.70%
发文量
123
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊最新文献
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