Abstract

BackgroundThe COVID-19 pandemic necessitated a shift from in-person to telehealth visits in many outpatient rehabilitation facilities. PurposeTo determine whether patients reported similar levels of satisfaction receivingtelehealth hand therapy as when receiving in-person hand therapy. Study DesignRetrospective review of patient satisfaction surveys. MethodsSatisfaction surveys were reviewed retrospectively among patients who participated in in-person hand therapy between April 21 and October 21, 2019, or after participating in telehealth hand therapy between April 21 and October 21, 2020. Information on gender, age, insurance provider, postoperative status and comments were also collected. Kruskal-Wallis tests were used to compare survey scores between groups. Chi -squared tests were used to compare categorical patient characteristics between groups. ResultsA total of 288 surveys were included: 121 surveys for in-person evaluations, 53 surveys for in-person follow-up visits, 55 surveys for telehealth evaluations and 59 surveys for telehealth follow-up visits. No significant differences in satisfaction were observed between in-person and telehealth visits of either type or when patients were stratified by age (p = 0.78), gender (p = 0.41), insurance payer group (p = 0.099) or postoperative status (p = 0.19). ConclusionsSimilar rates of satisfaction were observed with both in-person visits and telehealth hand therapy visits. Questions that related to registration and scheduling tended to score lower across all groups, while questions related to technology scored lower in the telehealth groups. Future studies are needed to explore the efficacy and viability of a telehealth platform for hand therapy services.

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