Abstract
Medical practices increasingly allow patients to schedule their own visits through online patient portals, yet little is known about who adopts direct scheduling or how this service is used. To determine patient and visit characteristics associated with direct scheduling, visit patterns, and potential implications for access and continuity in the primary care setting. This cross-sectional study used electronic health record (EHR) data from 17 adult primary care practices in a large academic medical center in the Boston, Massachusetts, area. Participants included patients 18 years or older who were attributed in the EHR to an active primary care physician at 1 of the included primary care practices, were enrolled in the patient portal, and had at least 1 visit to 1 of these practices between March 1, 2018, and March 1, 2019, the period of analysis. Data were analyzed from October 25, 2019, to April 14, 2020. Adoption of direct scheduling, defined as at least 1 use during the study period. Usual scheduling was defined as scheduling with clinic staff by telephone or in person. We examined 134 225 completed visits by 62 080 patients (mean [SD] age, 51.1 [16.4] years, 37 793 [60.9%] women) attributed to 140 primary care physicians at 17 primary care practices. A total of 5020 patients (8.1% [95% CI, 7.9%-8.3%]) adopted direct scheduling, with an age range of 18 to 95 years. Compared with nonadopters in the same practices, adopters were younger (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] per additional year, 0.98 [95% CI, 0.98-0.99]) and were more likely to be White (AOR, 1.09 [95% CI, 1.01-1.17]) and commercially insured (AOR vs uninsured, 1.40 [95% CI, 1.11-1.76]) and to have more comorbidities (AOR per additional comorbidity, 1.07 [95% CI, 1.04-1.11]). Compared with usually scheduled visits, directly scheduled visits were more likely to be for general medical examinations (1979 visits [36.7%] vs 26 519 visits [21.9%]; P < .001) and with one's own primary care physician (5267 visits [95.2%] vs 94 634 visits [73.5%]; P < .001). These findings suggest that direct scheduling was associated with greater primary care continuity. Early adopters were more likely to be young, White, and commercially insured, and to the extent these differences persist as direct scheduling is used more widely, this service may widen socioeconomic disparities in primary care access.
Highlights
Medical practices increasingly allow patients to schedule their own office visits through online patient portals, otherwise known as direct scheduling
These findings suggest that direct scheduling was associated with greater primary care continuity
This option is offered by the largest electronic health record (EHR) vendors and via external health care applications in the United States and internationally,[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8] which is consistent with trends toward self-service in most other industries
Summary
Medical practices increasingly allow patients to schedule their own office visits through online patient portals, otherwise known as direct scheduling. This option is offered by the largest electronic health record (EHR) vendors and via external health care applications in the United States and internationally,[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8] which is consistent with trends toward self-service in most other industries. In a 2013 survey,9 77% of US respondents said it was important to them that their medical provider offered online appointment booking; only 43% of respondents said that direct scheduling was offered in some form at the time. Direct scheduling might worsen disparities in access to care via the so-called digital divide.[8,11,12] Small studies of individual clinics and hospitals in the US, United Kingdom, Australia, and China provide early evidence that this approach may be associated with lower no-show rates[13,14] and the ability to schedule visits outside of usual business hours.[15,16] Yet there is little rigorous research on who uses direct scheduling, how it is used, or any unintended consequences.[17,18]
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