Understanding rural‐urban differences in veterans’ internet access, use and patient preferences for telemedicine

Author:

O'Shea Amy M. J.123ORCID,Gibson Mikayla4,Merchant James5,Rewerts Kelby2,Miell Kelly2,Kaboli Peter J.123,Shimada Stephanie L.678

Affiliation:

1. VA Office of Rural Health Veterans Rural Health Resource Center‐Iowa City (VRHRC‐IC), Iowa City Veterans Affairs Health Care System Iowa City Iowa USA

2. Center for Access and Delivery Research and Evaluation (CADRE), The Iowa City VA Healthcare System Iowa City Iowa USA

3. Department of Internal Medicine University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine Iowa City Iowa USA

4. Department of Human Physiology University of Iowa College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Iowa City Iowa USA

5. Department of Biostatistics University of Iowa College of Public Health Iowa City Iowa USA

6. Center for Healthcare Organization and Implementation Research (CHOIR), The Bedford VA Medical Center Bedford Massachusetts USA

7. Department of Health Law, Policy and Management Boston University School of Public Health Boston Massachusetts USA

8. Division of Health Informatics and Implementation Science Department of Population and Quantitative Health Sciences University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School Worcester Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe expansion of telemedicine (e.g., telephone or video) in the Veterans Health Administration (VA) raises concerns for health care disparities between rural and urban veterans. Factors impeding telemedicine use (e.g., broadband, digital literacy, age) disproportionally affect rural veterans.PurposeTo examine veteran‐reported broadband access, internet use, familiarity with, and preferences for telemedicine stratified by residential rurality.MethodsThree hundred fifty veterans with a VA primary care visit in March 2022 completed a 30‐min computer‐assisted telephone interview. The sampling design stratified veterans by residential rurality (i.e., rural or urban) and how primary care was delivered (i.e., in‐person or by video). Counts and weighted percentages are reported.FindingsAfter accounting for survey weights, 96.2% of respondents had in‐home internet access and 89.5% reported functional connection speeds. However, rural‐ compared to urban‐residing veterans were less likely to experience a telemedicine visit in the past year (74.1% vs. 85.2%; p = 0.02). When comparing telemedicine to in‐person visits, rural versus urban‐residing veterans rated them not as good (45.3% vs. 36.8%), just as good (51.1% vs. 53.1%), or better (3.5% vs. 10.0%) (p = 0.05). To make telemedicine visits easier, veterans, regardless of where they lived, recommended technology training (46.4%), help accessing the internet (26.1%), or provision of an internet‐enabled device (25.9%).ConclusionsThough rural‐residing veterans were less likely to experience a telemedicine visit, the same actionable facilitators to improve telemedicine access were reported regardless of residential rurality. Importantly, technology training was most often recommended. Policy makers, patient advocates, and other stakeholders should consider novel initiatives to provide training resources.

Funder

Office of Research and Development

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference28 articles.

1. Virtual care expansion in the Veterans Health Administration during the COVID-19 pandemic: clinical services and patient characteristics associated with utilization

2. Association of Secure Messaging with Primary Care In-Person and Telephone Visits Among Veterans: a Matched Difference-in-Difference Analysis

3. JercichK. How the VA Laid the Groundwork for a Pandemic‐fueled Telehealth Spike. HIMSS;2022.

4. The effectiveness of outpatient telehealth consultations;Seehusen DA;Am Fam Physician,2019

5. Impact of a university‐based outpatient telemedicine program on time savings, travel costs, and environmental pollutants;Dullet NWG;Sciencedirect,2017

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