Abstract

BackgroundThere is a paucity of access to pediatric infectious diseases (PID) physicians in the United States. To improve access, PID clinicians spend significant time providing nonreimbursed curbside consultations (CCs) to community providers. While there is increasing utilization of telehealth technologies to increase access to PID physicians, there is limited knowledge regarding adoption of these technologies and how they may be used to improve care and reimbursement.MethodsThe PIDS Telehealth Working Group developed a 33-question online survey to collect individual- and practice-level data on the burden of CCs, current telehealth practices and barriers, and interest in providing future telehealth services. It was emailed to the PIDS Listserv (n = 1,213) in April 2019.ResultsA total of 161 (13%) providers completed the survey (100% MD/DO), representing 37 states; most are university- (n = 100, 62%) and/or hospital- (n = 74, 46%) employed. Respondents’ practices provide a mean of 1–10 CCs/week to outside institutions (median 3–5 hours/week), with a median of 6–10% resulting in referrals. Outside nonreimbursed CCs are performed by phone/paging systems (n = 156, 98%), secure email (n = 66, 42%), text messaging (n = 46, 29%), and EMR-messaging (n = 38, 24%); they include a variety of services (Figure 1). Only 46 (29%) of individual respondents provide any type of reimbursed telehealth at their practices (Figure 2). Reimbursement mechanisms include fee-for-service (31%), Medicaid/Medicare (25%), private insurance (24%), and internal institutional (i.e., internal RVU) payments (16%). The majority of respondents were unaware of credentialing (n = 90, 64%) and liability coverage needs for telehealth (n = 68, 47%). Though most respondents (n = 81, 57%) were not satisfied with their current telehealth program and barriers were significant (Figure 3), the majority (n = 144, 95%) were interested in implementing a variety of reimbursable telehealth services and modalities (Figure 4).ConclusionPID survey respondents indicated a lack of knowledge on key aspects of telehealth and perceive significant barriers to implementing telehealth at their institutions. Nonetheless, there is a strong interest in participating in a variety of telehealth services to increase access to care, with appropriate institutional support. Disclosures All authors: No reported disclosures.

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