Giving Compass' Take:
- Research indicates that more Americans are willing to and more comfortable utilizing telehealth services since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.
- How can this help advance public health initiatives and increase access to healthcare?
- Read more about telehealth and the future.
What is Giving Compass?
We connect donors to learning resources and ways to support community-led solutions. Learn more about us.
Americans' use and willingness to use video telehealth has increased since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, rising most sharply among Black Americans and people with less education, according to a new RAND Corporation study.
Following a representative survey panel of Americans from March 2019 through March 2021, researchers found that the willingness to use video telehealth increased overall from 51 percent in February 2019 to 62 percent in March 2021.
Some of the largest changes occurred in subgroups that had the lowest levels of willingness to use video telehealth before the pandemic, rising from 42 percent to 67 percent among Black adults and from 30 percent to 56 percent among adults with less than a high school education.
The study is published in the November edition of the journal Health Affairs.
“Our findings suggest that more Americans are becoming comfortable with telehealth and using video technology,” said Shira H. Fischer, the study's lead author and a physician scientist at RAND, a nonprofit research organization. “This is important because there are concerns that lack of access to or willingness to use video telehealth may exacerbate disparities in the delivery of high-quality health care.”
Use of telehealth has increased rapidly during the COVID-19 pandemic as health care providers offered telephone or video visits to reduce the potential for virus spread and have generally maintained that access.
Before the pandemic, some groups including Black Americans, people with lower incomes, and adults with lower educational attainment, were less willing to engage in video telehealth. While the reasons are uncertain, researchers say some people have a lower trust of technology and lower rates of access to high-quality internet service.
While audio-only telehealth visits can increase access to care, experts say this may come at the expense of quality. Evidence of the quality of audio-only visits is scant and many clinicians report that audio-only visits are not as effective.
Studies have shown that clinicians can miss visual cues and struggle to establish rapport with patients, and audio-only visits are shorter. Some insurance companies and other health care payers have signaled they may stop reimbursing for audio-only visits when the public health emergency ends.
The new RAND study followed about 1,600 adults who participate in the RAND American Life Panel and completed surveys during February 2019, May 2020, August 2020, and March 2021 about their use and attitudes toward telehealth.
Read the full article about attitudes toward telehealth by Shira H. Fischer at RAND Corporation.