No Economic Disparities Found in Telehealth Usage Among Insured People
The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States brought a rapid increase in telehealth availability and usage. Understanding who used these services can inform future policies that aim for equitable access in telehealth.
Prior studies indicated that racial/ethnic minorities, people without a college degree, people living in lower income neighborhoods, and people without private health insurance were less likely to use telehealth during the early months of the pandemic. This study aimed to compare the use of telehealth over a longer term by people with private health insurance.
Findings: Among a commercially insured population with chronic conditions, people in the highest socioeconomic status (SES) quartile had higher use of telehealth. However, the three remaining quartiles had similar telehealth use, indicating that insured individuals in lower SES quartiles did not experience lower access to care than middle SES quartiles during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Elevance Health’s waiver of copays for telehealth during the first year of the pandemic meant that out-of-pocket costs would not have been a barrier for low-income individuals. This could have been a factor in the narrowing of socioeconomic disparities in telehealth usage,” said Andrea DeVries, vice president for Health Services Research at Elevance Health.
What’s Next: While most community care providers have returned to in-person visits, Elevance Health continues to make telehealth available to members of its affiliated health plans through the Sydney Health app.
Methodology: Researchers analyzed claims from 2.3 million commercially insured people with chronic conditions from March 2020 to February 2021. They compared the use of telehealth and total outpatient visits by neighborhood-level socioeconomic status quartile.
Read the Study: https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/pdf/10.1089/tmj.2022.0233
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