Abstract

BackgroundDuring the COVID-19 pandemic, telehealth technologies were used in the primary health care setting in New Brunswick as a means to continue providing care to patients while following public health guidelines. This study aimed to measure these changes and examine if they improved timely access to primary care. A secondary goal was to identify which telehealth technologies were deemed sustainable by primary care providers.MethodsThis was a comparative study on the use of telehealth technology before and during the COVID-19 pandemic. Between April 2020 and November 2020, 114 active primary care providers (family physicians or nurse practitioners) responded to the online survey.ResultsThe findings illustrated an increase in the use of telehealth technologies. The use of phone consultations increased by 122%, from 43.9% pre-pandemic to 97.6% during the pandemic (p < 0.001). The use of virtual consultation (19.3% pre-pandemic vs. 41.2% during the pandemic, p < 0.001), emails and texts also increased during the pandemic. Whereas the more structural organizational tools (electronic medical charts and reservation systems) remained stable. However, those changes did not coincide with a significant improvement to timely access to care during the pandemic. Many participants (40.1%) wanted to keep phone consultations, and 21.9% of participants wanted to keep virtual consultations as part of their long-term practice.InterpretationThe observed increase in the use of telehealth technologies may be sustainable, but it has not significantly improved timely access to primary care in New Brunswick.

Highlights

  • During the COVID-19 pandemic, many changes were made to the primary health care setting in New Brunswick in order to continue providing care to patients while following public health guidelines [1]

  • The use of virtual consultation (19.3% pre-pandemic vs. 41.2% during the pandemic, p < 0.001), emails and texts increased during the pandemic

  • This study illustrated an increase in the use of telehealth technologies in primary care in New Brunswick during the COVID-19 pandemic, especially use of telephone consultations, followed by virtual consultations and other technologies

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Summary

Introduction

During the COVID-19 pandemic, many changes were made to the primary health care setting in New Brunswick in order to continue providing care to patients while following public health guidelines [1]. As social distancing was a key measure in preventing the spread of COVID-19 and other communicable diseases by reducing person-to-person contact [5], many primary care providers were forced to increase use of virtual health or telehealth [6] as a means to continue providing care [7, 8]. During the COVID-19 pandemic, telehealth technologies were used in the primary health care setting in New Brunswick as a means to continue providing care to patients while following public health guidelines. A secondary goal was to identify which telehealth technologies were deemed sustainable by primary care providers

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